Who is the best player from each of England’s 48 counties?
Doll’s House - Courtney Harris
2013 April: Dollhouse
Why the Discredited Dossier Does Not Undercut the Russia Investigation
African Guitar Heroes
“Let’s kick it off with Djelimady Tounkara, one of the best instrumentalists of his generation, who happens to play the guitar. The former member of the Rail Band of Bamako has managed to make his instrument take on the accents and triplets he previously learnt on the ngoni, the Mandingo lute, and even makes it flirt with flamenco and Afro-Cuban sounds. While Mali is not lacking in six-string talent (the eternal Ali Farka Touré, father of Saharan-accented deep blues, Kante Manfila, Zani Diabaté, and Mama Sissoko, who was part of Super Biton of Ségou’s best days), the best sounds are coming from the Democratic Republic of Congo. Listen to our African Guitar Heroes playlist on Spotify and Deezer. ...”
Wild Things – The Creatures EP (1981)
2017 April: "Hong Kong Garden" / "Voices (On The Air)" (1978), 2017 September: "Playground Twist" (1979), 2018 October: Juju – Siouxsie and the Banshees (1981)
Gilbert Sorrentino - The Orangery (1978)
An 1873 map shows rural Brooklyn on the cusp of big changes
2009 April: Coney Island, 2010 July: Nathan's Famous, 2011 March: "An Underground Movement: Designers, Builders, Riders", Owen Smith, 2013 August: Donna Dennis: Coney Night Maze, 2013 October: Last Days of Summer at Coney Island, 2014 July: Coney Island - Directors: Steve Siegel and Phil Buehler (1973), 2015 May: The Case for Riding the Subway to the Last Stop, 2016 December: Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861-2008, 2017 August: Here's What Coney Island Looks Like In The Empty Pre-Dawn Hours, 2019 August: Pierless, 2021 July: The 1916 stunt that made Nathan’s Famous a Coney Island hot dog icon
Road - Fred Frith Trio (2021)
The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story (2021)
2021 April: The 1619 Project
In Willem de Kooning’s Loft at the Dawn of Bohemian New York
The Loft Generation: From the de Koonings to Twombly: Portraits and Sketches, 1942-2011 - Edith Schloss
Coffee or Chai? At 2 Kolkata Cafes, ‘Adda’ Is What’s Really on the Menu
“KOLKATA, India — At one of the cafes, to ask for chai is to invite a gaze of withering contempt from the turbaned waiter, as if blasphemy has been committed: It’s called the Indian Coffee House, stupid. At the other cafe, exclusively chai is served, slow-cooked over coal fire in the same dark kitchen for 103 years with the silent care of performing an old ritual. The history of this place, the Favorite Cabin, is visible in the layers of soot covering the walls, in the arched windows that filter the light in a soft aura of a bygone time, in the little attic overhead that’s an open burial vault for all the chairs broken under some storied customer who got carried away during a passionate debate. ...”
Legendary DJ John Peel Makes a List of His 20 Favorite Albums
2012 June: John Peel
The Art of Reading: An Illustrated History of Books in Paint
Thanksgiving with John Ehle
Madame Bovary and the Impossibility of Re-reading - Anjali Joseph
2012 August: On Cataloguing Flaubert, 2013 March: Sentimental Education - 1(1869), 2016 December: Three Tales (1877), 2017 August: The Sentimental Education (1869), 2018 May: In Which Our Tragic Effects Remain Purely Professional, 2019 March: The Dictionary of Accepted Ideas (1911)
Negativland Is Still Culture Jamming and Taking on Our Masters
UbuWeb: Our Favorite Things (Video) 1:18:11
2009 March: Negativland, 2012 January: Negativland (sound collage), 2012 December: No Other Possibility (1989), 2013 November: No Business (2005)
Drone Music, Stretched and Sliced
Off the Beaten Track - African Head Charge (1986)
Solskjaer Out at Manchester United After a Loss Too Far
A Friend, An Enemy
How German Expressionism Gave Rise to the “Dutch” Angle, the Camera Shot That Defined Classic Films by Welles, Hitchock, Tarantino & More
Sylvère Lotringer (1938 – 2021)
Radical Tea Towel
Did a Comet Explode Over South America 12000 Years Ago?
“A decade ago, researchers discovered huge chunks and slabs of dark green and black glass strewn across a 75 kilometer–long swath of the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. New evidence suggests they were created by an incoming fireball.The glass pieces are uncannily similar to trinitite, the glassy mineral forged by the heat of the first atomic bomb test in the New Mexico desert in 1945. Carbon-14 dating of organic matter in soil directly beneath and in contact with the glass indicated that the chunks formed about 12,000 years ago, when the area was a grassy wetland dotted with trees. ...”
The Avon Bard series of Latin American literature
Whatever Happened to the New York Auteur?
“... The city was his first subject. (Martin) Scorsese is what has been called a New York auteur; wherever else his moviemaking jones has taken him, he always returns to the city. He has been, in fact, part of a lineage of New York filmmakers—voices that have found their quintessence on the street corners and rooftops, in the long bars and half-finished lofts and too-small apartments and late-night diners and subway cars. Ever since the postwar era found its footing culturally, the New York auteur has been a vital megafauna in American film, the calloused, smart-mouthed countercharge to the homogenized, corporatized Hollywood model of film artist. But look around, in 2021: Where are they? ...”