Baking Gingerbread Cake with Laurie Colwin - Valerie Stivers
The Palladium, Flynn Theater, Brooklyn Academy of Music, The Spectrum, Symphony Hall, etc .(1967-2017)
The Clash, 1979 - The Palladium, NYC | Astor Piazzolla, 1988 - Flynn Theater, VT | Pina Bausch, 1984 - Café Müller, The Rite of Spring, Blaubart - Brooklyn Academy of Music NYC | Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, The Incredible String Band, 1968 - Cleveland, OH | Sun Ra and his Arkestra, 1988 - Hunt’s, VT | Fela Kuti, 1988 - Montreal, The Spectrum | Bob Marley and the Wailers, 1979 - Memorial Auditorium, VT | Pina Bausch, 1986 - Montreal, Place des Arts | John Prine, 1972 - Boston, Symphony Hall | Kamasi Washington, 2017 - Flynn Theater, VT
Bruce Springsteen the E Street Band, 1973 - Boston, Symphony Hall | Lucinda Williams, 2004 - Shelburne Farms, VT | Romeo Void, 1982 - Hunt’s, VT | Procol Harum, 1971 - SummerStage in Central Park, NYC | Philip Glass, 1982 - Memorial Auditorium, VT | Fred Frith, 1988 - Flynn Space, VT | Gillian Welch, 2004 - Winooski, Higher Ground, VT | Kate and Anna McGarrigle, 1984 - Hunt’s, VT | David Johansen, 1978 - UVM Athletics, VT | Talking Heads, 1979 - UVM Athletics, VT
Trisha Brown, 1989 - Flynn Theater, VT | Public Enemy, 1990 - Memorial Auditorium, VT | Steve
Goodman, 1973 - Cambridge, Club Passim, Boston | A View from the Bridge, Arthur Miller, 1967 - Sheridan Square Playhouse NYC | La La La Human Steps, 1992 - Flynn Theater, VT | New Order, 1984 - Montreal, The Spectrum | Susanne Linke, 1987 - Montreal | Bonnie Raitt, 1972 - Cambridge, Harvard Square Theatre | The Clash, 1979 - Montreal, Place des Arts | Talking Heads, 1984 - Flynn Space, VT
Rolling Thunder Revue, 1975 - UVM Athletics, VT | The Roches, 1968, 1984 - Allegheny College/Hunt’s, VT | Al Kooper, James Cotton, 1969 - SummerStage in Central Park, NYC | John Lincoln Wright, 1974 - Palmer St, Cambridge, Boston | Peter Tosh, 1981 - Memorial Auditorium, VT | Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, 1995 - Flynn Theate, VT | Keith Jarrett, 1977 - Shelburne Farm, VT | Elvis Costello the Attractions, 1979 - UVM Athletics, VT | Meredith Monk, 1988 - Flynn Theater, VT | The
Doors, 1968 - SummerStage in Central Park, NYC
Bob Dylan + The Band, 1973 - Boston, North Station | Doc Watson, 1967 - Carnegie Hall, NYC | Pere Ubu, 1989 - Club Metronome, VT | Grateful Dead, 1972 - Madison Square Garde, NYC | Simon & Garfunkel, 1968 - Forest Hills Stadium, NYC | David Bromberg, Bruce Springsteen, 1972 - Boston | Merce Cunningham, David Tudor, 1988 - Flynn Theater, VT | Richard Thompson, 1995 - Hunt’s, VT | Rosanne Cash, 2006 - Flynn Theater, VT | Michael Nyman, 1995 - Flynn Theater, VT
New York: The Drifters, The Crystals, The Young Rascals,
The Fifth Dimension, Gary Puckett and The Union Gap, Judy Collins, Beacon Street Union,
Pete Seeger, Sam and Dave, The Only Ones (CBGB), etc. Allegheny College. Tim Hardin, Grateful Dead (1970), Dave Mason, New
Riders Of
The Purple Sage, The Youngbloods, Boston: The Band (1976), Redbone (Club Passim), Maria Muldaur (Club
Passim), J. Geils Band, The Allman Brothers Band, Bonnie Raitt (1974), Bruce Springsteen (1975), J. Geils Band, etc. Vermont: Keith Jarrett (1978), Talking Heads (1982), Steve Reich, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Sly
& Robbie, Black Uhuru, Meredith Monk (2008), Philip Glass (1989),
Kronos Quartet, Laurie Anderson (1986, 209), Birdsongs of the Mesozoic (1988, 1990),
Afrika Bambaataa, George Clinton,
Habib Koite, etc. Montreal: The Clash (1984), King Sunny Adé, The Undertones, etc.
HAMAS LEADER IS DEAD
The Jazz Singers
Bay Ridge, Brooklyn
The Issues 2024: Why the Labor Movement is So Important to Americans
When Leonard Cohen Guest Starred on Miami Vice (1986)
"Leonard Cohen was Canada’s answer to Bob Dylan. While best known perhaps as a singer-songwriter who penned the tune 'Hallelujah'— which was covered by Jeff Buckley, John Cale and just about everyone else under the sun — he was also at varying points in his colorful life a poet, a novelist, a law student and a Zen monk. Well, you can add to this list guest star on Miami Vice. Yes. Miami Vice, Michael Mann’s decade-defining crime series that somehow made stubble, pastel colors and Don Johnson cool. ... You can see him and some truly breathtaking examples of ‘80s fashion in the clip above. Miami Vice had a habit of casting music icons. Little Richard, Frank Zappa, Miles Davis, Willie Nelson, and Eartha Kitt also appeared in the series. But, unlike Cohen, they didn’t act in French. ..."
Miami Vice had a habit of casting music icons. Little Richard, Frank Zappa, Miles Davis, Willie Nelson, and Eartha Kitt also appeared in the series. But, unlike Cohen, they didn’t act in French.
Below you can see a montage of 20 rock stars who appeared on Miami Vice during its run.
Appearing on the episode “French Twist,” Cohen plays Francois Zolan, a French secret service agent who is up to no good. Though he’s in the episode for only a couple of minutes and almost all of it on the phone, Cohen just manages to ooze menace. You can see him and some truly breathtaking examples of ‘80s fashion in the clip above.
Miami Vice had a habit of casting music icons. Little Richard, Frank Zappa, Miles Davis, Willie Nelson, and Eartha Kitt also appeared in the series. But, unlike Cohen, they didn’t act in French.
Below you can see a montage of 20 rock stars who appeared on Miami Vice during its run.
Appearing on the episode “French Twist,” Cohen plays Francois Zolan, a French secret service agent who is up to no good. Though he’s in the episode for only a couple of minutes and almost all of it on the phone, Cohen just manages to ooze menace. You can see him and some truly breathtaking examples of ‘80s fashion in the clip above.
Miami Vice had a habit of casting music icons. Little Richard, Frank Zappa, Miles Davis, Willie Nelson, and Eartha Kitt also appeared in the series. But, unlike Cohen, they didn’t act in French.
Below you can see a montage of 20 rock stars who appeared on Miami Vice during its run.
The Trump Voters Who Don’t Believe Trump
"One of the more peculiar aspects of Donald J. Trump’s political appeal is this: A lot of people are happy to vote for him because they simply do not believe he will do many of the things he says he will. The former president has talked about weaponizing the Justice Department and jailing political opponents. He has said he would purge the government of non-loyalists and that he would have trouble hiring anyone who admits that the 2020 election wasn’t stolen. He proposed 'one really violent day' in which police officers could get 'extraordinarily rough' with impunity. He has promised mass deportations and predicted it would be 'a bloody story.' And while many of his supporters thrill at such talk, there are plenty of others who figure it’s all just part of some big act. There is, of course, evidence to the contrary. During Mr. Trump’s term in office, some of his autocratic rhetoric did become reality. ..."
NY TimesA Great Disorder: National Myth and the Battle for America by Richard Slotkin
"The stories that a country tells itself are just as critical to its functioning as its army, its laws, its borders, and its flag. Where did the country emerge from, and where might it be heading? Such questions of national mythology are especially fraught in the United States, still relatively young in the world, big, rich, powerful, multiethnic, and operating on a set of profoundly contradictory ideas. That it might be possible to make sense of American political division by naming those myths and interpreting the news of the day through their filter is the guiding ambition of Richard Slotkin’s exciting and detailed new decoder ring of a book, A Great Disorder: National Myth and the Battle for America. ..."
Culture of Jamaica
Paris 1874: The Impressionist Moment
“Those Folks Never Had Their Lights Turned Off.” On the Literary Importance of Highlighting the Haves and the Have-Nots
Waiting Hours for 3 Minutes in the Criterion Closet (Well, Van)
"The hottest event at this year’s New York Film Festival isn’t a film at all. It’s a van. Parked next to Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center, the mobile version of the Criterion Closet — a tiny space stocked with the prestigious DVDs and Blu-rays of films in the Criterion Collection — attracted a line that wrapped around the block. It was a chance for festivalgoers to enact their own version of the Closet Picks videos, in which celebrities like Bill Hader, Ayo Edebiri and Willem Dafoe visit a product-filled closet in the company’s Manhattan office. They pick out their favorite titles and evangelize about their choices while not so coincidentally on tour promoting their latest projects. (Dafoe’s haul included Luchino Visconti’s 'The Leopard' and the actor’s own 'The Last Temptation of Christ'; Edebiri left with Wes Anderson’s 'Bottle Rocket,' among other titles, and Hader’s selections included the western 'My Darling Clementine.') ..."
Siti of Unguja (Romance Revolution on Zanzibar) - Siti Muharam (2020)
Early computer art by Barbara Nessim (1984)
Every Falsehood, Exaggeration and Untruth in Trump’s and Harris’s Stump Speeches
'Apocalypse 91… The Enemy Strikes Black’: Public Enemy’s Daring Album
Brooklyn Museum at 200 Celebrates Beauty and Art’s Hidden History
How to Make Poetry Comics
Judge Unseals New Evidence in Federal Election Case Against Trump
Apples, Clogs and Pottery: Parees Celebrates Asturian Identity
Viennese coffee house culture
Murder Ballads by Various
"100 track collection of vintage Murder Ballads, songs that have evolved from British & European Folklore, murders & tragedies to American outlaws & gangsters... featuring Folk, Blues & County icons such as... - Big Bill Broonzy, Blind Willie McTell, Bob Dylan, Brownie McGhee, Burl Ives, Champion Jack Dupree, Charley Patton, Charley Pride, Earl Johnson, Ethel Waters, Johnny Cash, Josh White, Kid Bailey, Lead Belly, Lefty Frizzell, Long 'Cleve' Reed & Little Harvey Hull, Lonnie Donegan & His Skiffle Group, Marty Robbins, Mike Seeger, Mississippi John Hurt, Peggy Seeger, Pete Seeger, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Red River Dave McEnery, Roscoe Holcomb, Sippie Wallace, The Louvin Brothers, Woody Guthrie - a sub-genre of the traditional ballads, make up a notable portion of traditional ballads, many of which originated in Scandinavia, England, and lowland Scotland in the premodern era. In those, while the murder is committed, the murderer usually suffers justice at the hands of the victim's family, even if the victim and murderer are related. Perspectives are numerous. ..."