"With its tin ceiling, mosaic tile floor, and handsome mahogany bar,
Teddy’s Bar and Grill is like stepping into a late 19th century time
machine. This corner tavern on Berry and North Eighth Streets in Williamsburg opened in 1887 as a family-run Irish tavern, according to Teddy’s website.
At the time, Brooklyn was a separate city and Williamsburg was a
working-class district of Irish and German immigrants, many of whom
worked along the waterfront a few blocks away in sugar refineries and
other industrial plants. ..."
What the 1910s stained glass windows say about a 19th century Brooklyn tavern
Israel’s Worst Day at War
"When I need the most accurate analysis
about Israel, the first call I always make is to my longtime friend and
reporting partner there, Nahum Barnea, a veteran Yediot newspaper
columnist. When I called him on Saturday afternoon for his read on the
Hamas attack on Israel, I was stunned by his first response: 'This is
the worst day that I can remember in military terms in the history of
Israel, including the blunder of the Yom Kippur war, which was
terrible.' Nahum is a careful reporter
who has covered every major event in Israel for the past half century,
and when he explained his rationale, I realized it was an
understatement. ..."
NY Times: Opinion | Thomas L. Friedman
Maxim Barkalifa stood on the roof of his neighbor’s house and surveys the damage to another neighbor’s house that was struck by a rocket fired from Gaza in Ashkelon, Israel, on Saturday.
The London Howlin' Wolf Sessions - Howlin' Wolf (1971)
"The London Howlin' Wolf Sessions is an album by blues musician Howlin' Wolf released in 1971 on Chess Records, and on Rolling Stones Records in Britain.
It was one of the first super session blues albums, setting a blues
master among famous musicians from the second generation of rock and roll, in this case Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, Charlie Watts, and Bill Wyman. It peaked at #79 on the Billboard 200. ... Clapton secured the participation of the Rolling Stones rhythm section (pianist Ian Stewart,
bassist Bill Wyman and drummer Charlie Watts), while Dayron assembled
further musicians, including 19-year-old harmonica prodigy Jeffrey Carp, who died in 1973 at age 24. ..."
What happened when Howlin' Wolf hooked up with rock royalty to make an album (Video)
The Neil Young song that attacks Starbucks
"Neil Young
has consistently voiced his concerns throughout his career. While his
constant desire to stand up for what’s right has earned him several
enemies over the years, nobody can question Young’s authenticity, and
his unwillingness to stay quiet deserves to be respected. It’s a
character trait that continues to follow him today, with businesses from
Spotify to Starbucks among those in the firing line. ... Young was eventually the victor as the GMA were unsuccessful in their
attempt to overturn Vermont’s decision to enforce labelling on
genetically modified produce. However, it’s improbable he’s returned to
Starbucks to get his daily coffee fix. ..."
Neil Young's New Music Video Mocks Starbucks, Monsanto, and GMOs (Video)
Neil Young’s new anti-GMO song confuses science on Starbucks, Monsanto
Cooking with Madame d’Aulnoy By Valerie Stivers
"The fairy tales of Mary-Catherine le Jumel de Barneville, Baronesse
d’Aulnoy—first published in French in the 1690s—are full of jewel-like
foods, poisoned drinks, and violent feats of baking. The cooking is
extreme. In one story, 'Finette-Cendron,' a Cinderella figure, pleases
her fairy godmother by baking her a cake with 'two pounds of butter';
later, she serves her a feast made from two chickens, a cock, and 'two
little rabbits that were being fed up with cabbage.'... Lest anyone find d’Aulnoy’s repasts and their power unrealistic, the
opposite is true, as I discovered while attempting to re-create the food
with my friend Celia Bell, whose novel, The Disenchantment, published this May, was inspired by d’Aulnoy’s life and work. ..."
Music That Listens to Itself (Playlist)
"I just got back home from the 'Music That Listens to Itself' event that I hosted in Berkeley at the Alembic.
Here, quickly, is the evening’s 80-minute playlist (I trimmed one track
to get the full set to fit). The first six tracks came from the recent
Disquiet Junto project (0611)
that engaged with the theme of the evening. More details soon. I had a
blast. Major thanks to Erik Davis, Samuel Plattner, and everyone who
came. Each of the Junto tracks in the list links to its SoundCloud page,
and each of the other six links to the album, on Bandcamp, where it
originated. ..."
Carl Jung on the Power of Tarot Cards: They Provide Doorways to the Unconscious & Perhaps a Way to Predict the Future
"... The eminent psychiatrist Carl Jung, however, might have done so. As Mary K. Greer explains, in a 1933 lecture Jung went on at length about his views on the Tarot, noting the late Medieval cards are 'really the origin of our pack of cards, in which the red and the black symbolize the opposites, and the division of the four—clubs, spades, diamonds, and hearts—also belongs to the individual symbolism. They are psychological images, symbols with which one plays, as the unconscious seems to play with its contents.' ..."
Let's Ride: Art history after Black studies
"BLACK STUDIES—as modeled by the transdisciplinary work of contemporary thinkers such as Kimberlé Crenshaw, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Saidiya Hartman, Kara Keeling, Katherine McKittrick, Christina Sharpe, Fred Moten, and Frank B. Wilderson III—has grown increasingly central to critical thought in the art world and the academy, with especially urgent implications for art-historical praxis: How do the discipline’s notions of objecthood and objectivity shift in light of transatlantic slavery’s production of persons as property? How must art-historical methods, given their origins in racist, sexist, and colonialist epistemologies, be retooled to engage with complexities of Black life and expression that are designed to evade capture?..."
Living Dub Volume One & Two - Burning Spear
"Like many records from the first murky decade of reggae's mature period,
this one has a complicated history. It is the dubwise companion to
Burning Spear's classic album of 1978, Social Living. However, Social Living was also released under the title Marcus Children. Living Dub, Vol. 1, which consisted of dub mixes by Sylvan Morris,
was originally released as a vinyl record shortly after the album on
which it is based, but the CD reissue released under that title in 1993
actually consists of a completely different set of dub mixes by Barry O'Hare; the original mixes were released on CD ten years later, on the revived Burning Spear label, as Original Living Dub, Vol. 1. ..."
allmusic: Vol. 1 (Audio), allmusic: Vol. 2 (Audio)
W - Living Dub Vol. 1, W - Living Dub Vol. 2
YouTube: Living dub vol 1 38:50, Living dub vol 2 39:49
Glasgow to the rescue! Blast of realism gives the new Scottish galleries punch
"One thing rapidly becomes clear in these lavish new purpose-built galleries of Scottish art: Scotland likes itself. Or at least, Scottish curators are far fonder of their country than their opposite numbers at Tate Britain and the National Portrait Gallery are of the UK as a whole. Whereas these London museums have recently opened rehangs that call out past injustices and national guilt, Edinburgh’s new look at Scotland’s artistic story is a celebration. It’s also ravishing. ..."
Passion for place … detail from Wandering Shadows, 1878, Peter Graham.
Sun Ra Sundays
"Linked below (as pdf) are two compilations—one by me, one by Sam Byrd—of blog posts about SUN RA recordings authored by RODGER G. COLEMAN from 2008 to 2015. These were originally posted each Sunday at nuvoid.blogspot.com. Coleman's blog contains hundreds of posts on a myriad of music subjects; we've harvested the Ra content. To preserve and circulate this 'Saturn research,' I compiled a chronological text-only edition in late 2018, whereas Sam sequenced Rodger's posts in discographical order with blog graphics...."
Highlights From A Colorful “Asalto”: Zaragoza's Premier Street Art Festival Flourishes.
"Zaragoza’s Asalto Festival, in its recent edition, once again
demonstrates a magnetic pull in the world of street art, attracting both
local talent and international artists. Nestled in La Jota, one of
Zaragoza’s most historic neighborhoods, the festival radiated creativity
on the streets from September 15 to 24. Not only did it reclaim its
mural game, but it also embraced a spectrum of activities reminiscent of
its pre-pandemic grandeur. ..."
Taroe. Festival Asalto 2023. Zaragoza, Spain.
The literary World Cup: readers’ best all-time teams
"July 2014: “Back when the World Cup was in those exciting and unpredictable first rounds, we were playing away at Penguin’s imaginary books World Cup, where an England with JK Rowling, George Orwell and Agatha Christie in attack and the likes of Shakespeare and Dickens in the midfield could possibly – possibly – have had a chance to win something. The UK imprint imagined matches and footballing incidents on Twitter, and we joined in the fun, asking for your all-time favourite literary teams. Now that the actual competition is coming to an end, here are our top five writers’ XIs. ..."
GuardianYukes – White Ghost beyond the Great Firewall
"1. Favourite knob or fader or switch on a piece of gear and why? If I’m being honest, the 'feather touch technology' buttons on my
Yamaha MT44 4-track cassette machine are just… something else entirely. Back in the 80’s when buttons n’ switches were more mechanical and
clicky, a lot of different 'options' were lost to the more common ones.
What we have here is a thin ribbon beneath a plastic cover with no
click. Sounds bad right? But when you press the button, it causes whatever mechanical function
you triggered in the machine to violently come to life somewhere deep
within the machine, causing an almost distant haptic shake, despite the
button feeling almost unresponsive. ..."
Yamaha MT44 cassette tape recorder
Face the Music: Nigerian 1970s album covers reflected individual and national identities.
"On the cover of Geraldo Pino and the Heartbeats’ 1972 debut album, Afro Soco Soul Live,
is a man breaking his chains. In the background are drums and people
dancing. ... Two years later, the cover of their next album, Let’s Have a Party,
was a portrait of a woman sitting in an evening gown, wine glass in
hand, afro blown out, chin up, gaze transfixed. Placed on a red
background, the portrait is edited with an embossed filter such that the
woman looks like a silver relief sculpture. ... Global oil price shocks of 1973–1974
resulted in the most monumental transfer of wealth Nigeria has seen to
date. Nigeria too was on the clouds—of an oil boom. ..."
Waiting for the Nighthawks – Edward Hopper and the Denizens of New York
"Edward Hopper was a visual alchemist.
Scenes of life’s mundanities — offices, street corners, apartment
blocks, rooftops — entered his eyes, traversed his meticulous brain,
quested through spine and viscera, and flowed into fingers wielding
brushes to materialize on canvas as mesmerizing dramas of light, volume,
and psychology. Even when his workaday spaces are unoccupied, they
thrum with mysterious narratives. ..."
Judge Rules Trump Committed Fraud, Stripping Control of Key Properties
"A New York judge ruled on Tuesday that
Donald J. Trump persistently committed fraud by inflating the value of
his assets, and stripped the former president of control over some of
his signature New York properties. The
surprising decision by Justice Arthur F. Engoron is a major victory for
Attorney General Letitia James in her lawsuit against Mr. Trump,
effectively deciding that no trial was needed to determine that he had
fraudulently secured favorable terms on loans and insurance deals. Ms.
James has argued that Mr. Trump inflated the value of his properties by
as much as $2.2 billion and is seeking a penalty of about $250 million
in a trial scheduled to begin as early as Monday. ..."
***NY Times: Trump’s Lawyers Try to Grasp the Implications of Judge’s Fraud Ruling
NY Times: Ruling Against Trump Cuts to the Heart of His Identity
My Strawberry Plants: On Marcottage
"Recently, I read Virginia Woolf’s first published novel, The Voyage Out, for the first time. There, I made a discovery: it features a character named Clarissa Dalloway. This encounter initially provoked delight, surprise combined with double take, like bumping into someone I thought I knew well in a setting I never expected to find them, causing a brief mutual repositioning, physically, imaginatively. ... Then I remembered why I’d had that 'caught out,' 'I should have known this' feeling: this same technique of novel-growth was also of great interest to Roland Barthes. In his lecture courses at the Collège de France in the late seventies, he named it marcottage. It’s a horticultural term...."
Alphonse du Breuil, Marcottage en serpenteaux, 1846.
America Is Using Up Its Groundwater Like There’s No Tomorrow
"Global warming has focused
concern on land and sky as soaring temperatures intensify hurricanes,
droughts and wildfires. But another climate crisis is unfolding,
underfoot and out of view. Many of
the aquifers that supply 90 percent of the nation’s water systems, and
which have transformed vast stretches of America into some of the
world’s most bountiful farmland, are being severely depleted. These
declines are threatening irreversible harm to the American economy and
society as a whole. The New York
Times conducted a months-long examination of groundwater depletion,
interviewing more than 100 experts, traveling the country and creating a
comprehensive database using millions of readings from monitoring
sites. ..."
David Byrne and the Modern Self: “How Do I Work This?”
"STOP MAKING SENSE (1984), compiled from footage of four 1983 Talking Heads concerts, is a good movie, but it counts more as a major contribution to our current stock of troubled figures—or figurative troubles. According to the credits, Stop Making Sense was “conceived for the stage” by David Byrne, lead singer of the Heads. Byrne had pictorial intentions to his design, which director Jonathan Demme respected. Instead of a plot, the movie chronicles the elegant gestures and twitches, manic and grand, of Byrne’s ongoing struggle to find a fit between his 3D body and the 2D screen. Toward the end of the film Byrne encases himself in the literal, boxy flatness of a white suit a couple of feet too wide for his frame...."
A NASA Spacecraft Comes Home With an Asteroid Gift for Earth
"A brown-and-white capsule that spent the
last seven years swooping through the solar system — and sojourning at
an asteroid — has finally come home. And it has brought a cosmic
souvenir: a cache of space rock that scientists are hungry to get their
hands on. On Sunday morning, those
scientists waited eagerly as the pod shot through Earth’s atmosphere at
thousands of miles per hour. It gently parachuted down into the damp
desert landscape of the Utah Test and Training Range, about 80 miles
west of Salt Lake City, at 8:52 a.m. local time. ..."
YouTube: Tour of Asteroid Bennu
Rotherham’s Millmoor: The mystery of the unused ghost stadium
"You can see the floodlights as you come off the motorway, just before reaching central Rotherham. Turn onto Masbrough Street and the stadium reveals itself on the left, halfway up the hill and just before Coronation Bridge that goes over the train line. If you just went past with not much more than a glance, Millmoor would look like any other lower league football ground: old, could do with a little care and attention, but identifiably a football ground. Until, perhaps, you caught sight of the barbed wire. ..."
YouTube: Abandoned Millmoor Football Stadium Exploration 15:53
Netflix Prepares to Send Its Final Red Envelope
"In a nondescript office park minutes from
Disneyland sits a nondescript warehouse. Inside this nameless, faceless
building, an era is ending. The
building is a Netflix DVD distribution plant. Once a bustling ecosystem
that processed 1.2 million DVDs a week, employed 50 people and generated
millions of dollars in revenue, it now has just six employees left to
sift through the metallic discs. And even that will cease on Friday,
when Netflix officially shuts the door on its origin story and stops
mailing out its trademark red envelopes. ..."
Inca Records: A History Of The Puerto Rican Salsa Label
"When the Dominican music virtuoso Johnny Pacheco and the Brooklyn-born lawyer Jerry Masucci teamed up to form the inimitable salsa label Fania Records, the stars seemed to align. The duo captured the salsa phenomenon before it even had a name, and their efforts would help shoot the genre into the global spotlight. But Fania’s success wasn’t just a matter of fate. Pacheco and Masucci had two important qualities: sharp business acumen and an undeniable eye for talent. The combination explains, in part, why they began scooping up New York City labels such as Tico Records, Alegre Records, and Cotique Records in the early 1970s – acquisitions that shrunk their competition and expanded an already impressive roster of artists...."
Guardian: Everybody salsa! Fania, the ramshackle New York label that sent Latin rhythms global
1960s: Days of Rage - An NYC Mambo, Boogaloo and Salsa Family Tree (April 2019)
A Majestic Gesture in Geneva. Saype Advocates Peace, Healing
"Now in his mid-thirties and painting large skill land art for over a
decade, it is still a pleasant surprise to see renowned street artist
Saype unveiling a new masterpiece. His recent project in Place des
Nations, Geneva, was commissioned by Handicap International. With it, he
hopes to present an eco-responsible image that depicts a hand
emblematic of humanity, offering a new leg to the iconic “Broken Chair” –
a symbol for the numerous innocent victims of war bombings. ..."
Up Against the Real: Black Mask from Art to Action - Nadja Millner-Larsen
ARTFORUM: Up Against the Well - J. Hoberman
Black Mask, the Radical Collective Who Tried to Shut Down MoMA
The Strange World Of... Gavin Bryars
"Gavin Bryars' music presents the listener with sublime paradoxes. It
sounds both familiar and uncanny; archaic and modern; elegiac and
impassive. His unfurling melodies tug at the heartstrings, but drift
away from any anticipated climaxes. His scores draw on 20th century
minimalist and experimental music, refracted through Renaissance choral
music, cushioned by an Edwardian gauze of dark-hued strings. It's music
for time travellers. ...."
2023 April: The Sinking Of The Titanic (1975)
When Metalsmiths Found Their Groove
"On a heavy incense burner made some 700 years ago, a laudatory
inscription in Arabic encircles the name of the sultan. From a distance,
the inlaid strokes of its naskhi script burst like golden sunrays. For a
small pen case of about the same age, only a close-up view reveals a
universe of intertwining inlaid designs where silver birds fly inside
golden spheres. So opulent are such pieces that it is hard to believe
the amount of precious metal in them is small. Mostly, they are made of a
common metal alloy that, in the 12th century CE, metalsmiths in the
Turco-Persian Seljuq world transformed into luxury ware. Today, it is as
iconic of Islamic art as lavishly illustrated manuscripts or tilework
tessellated with arabesques and geometry. ..."
The open grooves of this 12th-century bronze-cast vessel once held inlaid silver and copper.
The Avantgarde Series
"I recently received a 21CD box set from the Deutsche Grammophon label, reissuing almost all of the two dozen albums they put out between 1968 and 1971 in their Avantgarde series. Four boxes, each containing six LPs, were released, one each year, premiering works by composers including Luciano Berio, John Cage, Cornelius Cardew, Luc Ferrari, Vinko Globokar, Mauricio Kagel, Roland Kayn, Gyorgy Ligeti, Luigi Nono, Krszystof Penderecki, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and many others. There are string quartets, organ pieces, vocal works, electronic and tape compositions, things that sound like weirdo theater happenings, and pretty much anything else you can imagine. ..."
Various Artists - The Avantgarde Series (Audio)
Ukraine Has Gained Ground. But It Has Much Farther to Go.
"In June, Ukraine prepared to launch its counteroffensive facing immense
risks: Without a decisive victory, Western support could weaken, and
Kyiv could face pressure to negotiate a ceasefire. Since then, Ukrainian forces have breached the first line of defense in
some Russian positions along this southern line of advance, the
counteroffensive’s most promising front. Kyiv’s forces have recaptured the tiny village of Robotyne, a tactical
victory that highlighted the enormous challenges that lie ahead. Progress has been grueling and slow. In some weeks, troops have moved only a few yards at a time along this line of advance. ..."
Slapp Happy's Sort Of (50th Anniversary)
"The borders between what gets termed prog rock and post punk were far
more porous and negligently policed than the conventional histories of
either have tended to credit. How did John Lydon transform British music
for a second time in two years? By walking backwards into his teenage
loves of prog acts such as Van der Graaf Generator and Captain
Beefheart. The Fall may have loudly scoffed at hippiedom, but they
emerged from a Hawkwind-listening, spliff-smoking, psychedelic-gobbling
counterculture in Prestwich that owed a lot to those ideals. ..."
U.N. General Assembly: Zelensky Warns World Leaders That Russian Aggression Could Expand Beyond Ukraine
World leaders debate pressing issues. Here’s the latest. "At
the annual gathering of world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly on
Tuesday in New York City, President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine
presented Russia’s aggression as a worldwide unrelenting threat that
would not stop at the borders of Ukraine. 'The
goal of the present war against Ukraine is to turn our land, our
people, our lives, our resources into a weapon against you, against the
international rules-based order,' Mr. Zelensky told the assembled
leaders. He added that Russia was weaponizing essentials like food and
energy 'not only against our country, but against all of yours, as
well.' His
remarks were among the most scathing in a series of addresses by world
leaders, including President Biden, who condemned Russia’s 'naked
aggression' and said the United States would continue to stand with the 'brave people of Ukraine.' ..."
NY Times: Abrams Tanks Expected to Arrive in Ukraine Soon, Austin Says (Video)
The Ukrainian president delivered a speech at the U.N. General Assembly meeting before his visit to Washington.
Aroun Haouzi El Baidi – Ana nadi bel ghram [Sides 1-2], Polyphon, 1932
"'I am the one who is in love,' Aroun Haouzi El Baidi sang majestically into a microphone in a Constantine recording studio in 1932, 'O my desired one.' On this ninety year old recording of “Ana al-ladhi bil-gharam ya saʿfaya” (أَنَا الذِي بَالغْرَامْ يَا سَعْفَايَا), the Aïn Beïda-born Algerian Jewish musician expertly executes an integral song-text of the mahjuz repertoire, itself part of the extended family of Constantine’s classical maluf tradition (and sometimes considered to be an antecedent to it). ..."
2019 February: Gharamophone
The story of a magnificent 1850s house dubbed the Blue Belle of Brooklyn
"It’s the blue belle of Brooklyn; a former country villa that stands
alone at 271 Ninth Street, between walkup flats and a featureless
one-story Post Office. Passing this dowager beauty, which has stood on the block between Fourth
and Fifth Avenues since the Antebellum era, is like being in a time
machine. Everything about it is a wonderful anachronism: the mansard
roof, the lacy ironwork over the bay windows, the front yard with
rosebushes and lavender. ..."
The “Caribbeanization” of Afrobeat in Colombia
"Bogotá Orquesta Afrobeat (La BOA), the first self-designated Afrobeat
band in Colombia was created in 2009, about 37 years after Fela’s Shakara
became a hit on the western coast of Colombia, and 12 years after
Fela’s death.. In this article, I trace Afrobeat’s memorable arrival in
Colombia, its impact on the cultural landscape, and the transformations
it is undergoing in a country where, since the Frente Amplio
(Large Front) won elections in June 2022, a complex process of
self-renewal and 'total peace' is underway to tackle the scourge of
para-military, state and drug trafficking violence, as well as the
impact of guerrilla warfare. ..."