03
Nov 11

SRV: Born On This Day

Stevie Ray Vaughn
October 3, 1954 – August 27, 1990

Stevie Ray Vaughan would have been 57 years old today, October 3rd. His music, his amazing guitar playing, his style, are a milestone in music history. Not many people can listen to his music and not tap a foot or become lost in his Texas-fusion of blues and rock.

Truly one of the greats, he is ranked right up there with the best of the contemporary rock and blues musicians… Hendrix, Clapton, Richards, Page, Cooder, King, Allman, Santana, Beck, and a few others. I’d easily rank him in the top five rock and blues guitarists.

Although he died a tragic death in a helicopter crash, he lives on through his amazing music.

Listen to “Pride and Joy”
Stevie Ray Vaughn – Pride And Joy
Listen to “Little Wing”
Stevie Ray Vaughn – Little Wing


02
Nov 11

Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin: Born On This Day

Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin: Self-Portrait

Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin
(2 November 1699 – 6 December 1779)

An 18th-century French painter, he is considered a master of still life, and is also noted for his genre paintings which depict kitchen maids, children, and domestic activities. Carefully balanced composition, soft diffusion of light, and granular impasto characterize his work.

Chardin’s influence on the art of the modern era was wide-ranging, and has been well-documented. Édouard Manet’s half-length Boy Blowing Bubbles and the still lifes of Paul Cézanne are equally indebted to their predecessor. He was one of Henri Matisse’s most admired painters; as an art student Matisse made copies of four Chardin paintings in the Louvre. Chaim Soutine’s still lifes looked to Chardin for inspiration, as did the paintings of Georges Braque, and later, Giorgio Morandi. In 1999 Lucian Freud painted and etched several copies after The Young Schoolmistress (National Gallery, London)

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01
Nov 11

Lyle Lovett: Born On This Day

Lyle Lovett – b. Nov. 1, 1957
is an American singer, songwriter and farmer. He also acts a bit – and used to be married to Julia Roberts.

Lyle Lovett’s career bloomed late but by the time he signed a major recording contract he was nearly 30 years old and had years of experience playing cover songs and folk festivals.

Lovett’s quirky tunes, each of them a beguiling story in miniature, have helped define a new breed of singer-songwriter who exists outside traditional boundaries like folk and country.

Listen to “All My Love Is Gone”
Lyle Lovett_06_All My Love Is Gone


01
Nov 11

Is this racist? Donald Trump Thinks So…

Donald Trump accused Jon Stewart of vicious racism against Herman Cain in a Tuesday web video.

Stewart mocked Cain on Monday for his somewhat shambolic response to a story that he faced sexual harassment charges during the 1990s. Stewart mostly seemed to be making double entendres, but Trump saw his take, and his brief impersonation of Cain, as bigoted.

“How come Jon Stewart gets away with a very very racist rant against Herman Cain?” he wondered. “…It’s not what he said but the way he said it. The tone of his voice, the inflection. Unbelievable! Anybody else, deep deep trouble.”

Trump called for Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton to denounce Stewart, and asked “sleepy-eyed Chuck Todd” to criticize the “horrible, horrible thing” the comedian had done. He said Stewart had been “insulting” to African Americans and should apologize.


01
Nov 11

I’m Still Hot (featuring Betty White)


31
Oct 11

How do you really feel about it Pete?

Pete Townshend wrote an overwhelming majority of the songs for The Who. He's considered one of the all-time great rock guitar musicians.

Pete Townshend: iTunes Is A ‘Digital Vampire’

LONDON — The Who’s Pete Townshend on Monday branded Apple Inc.’s iTunes a “digital vampire” that profits from music without supporting the artists who create it.

Townshend said that faced with the Internet’s demolition of established copyright protections, iTunes should offer some of the services to artists that record labels and music publishers used to provide. These include employing talents scouts, giving space to allow bands to stream their music and paying smaller artists directly rather than through a third party aggregator.

Listen to “Who Are You?”
The Who: Who Are You?
The guitarist was delivering the first John Peel Lecture, named in honor of the influential British radio broadcaster who died in 2004.

Townshend asked if there was any reason iTunes “can’t provide some aspect of these services to the artists whose work it bleeds like a digital vampire” to make money.

ITunes declined to respond to Townshend’s comments.

Apple’s service is the market leader among legal download services, accounting for about three-quarters of music downloads.

Townshend said consumers, as well as the industry, needed to change their attitude to digital music.

“It would be better if music lovers treated music like food, and paid for every helping, rather than only when it suited them,” he said.

“Why can’t music lovers just pay for music rather than steal it?” he said.


31
Oct 11

Translation Please?

Haruki Murakami

Guess what? There are some amazing non-English-speaking authors out there that are well worth reading! Thanks to excellent translators, I’m reading them.

I’ve read several translated books and have been impressed with the fact that they didn’t seem like translations. In fact, once into the book, my hesitancy to read a non-English-speaking author vanished. The translations are that good.

I’m not sure where the hesitancy comes from; is it an innate feeling of superiority over foreigners or because of the awkwardness of different grammatical rules between different languages.

Stieg Larssen

I’ve even steered clear of British authors because of that bias. But I have a feeling that I’m not alone in my hesitancy.

Today’s modern translators are unsung heroes of the literary world. Think about it. They must not only translate the actual words. They must also accurately convey the authors intentions for every passage. And, perhaps most importantly, the reader must not be aware that it is a translation.

Ninni Holmqvist

Most of the translated books I’ve read have been wonderful.

  • The whole of Swedish author Stieg Larssen‘s “The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo” series held me like few books can.
  • “The Unit”, a haunting book by another Swedish author, Ninni Holmqvist, left me wanting more.
  • I’m about to read Haruki Murakami’s just-published “1Q84”.

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29
Oct 11

Vivian Maier: Unknown Photographer

Vivian Maier was a street photographer from the 1950’s to the 1990’s. But nobody saw her amazing work until recently.

Her works are some of the most stunning street photos I’ve ever seen. They were recently discovered in a Chicago auction; the auction house acquired her belongings from her storage locker that was sold off due to delinquent payments. In the collection, there were over 100,000 negatives, thousands of prints, and an untold number of undeveloped film rolls.

Unfortunately she passed away before the buyer tracked her down. Her life is obscure, but her photography is anything but. I’m thrilled that the buyer, John Maloof, has chosen to curate and share her works.

Good street photography is a difficult art… but great street photography takes an innate talent that few of us have. Many of us strive to catch those wonderful moments, but fall short of the mark. Vivian Maier possessed the magic and the talent to harness it.

A huge part of the difficulty is simply aiming a camera at someone. For one thing, it raises suspicion. Also, there is a hesitance to invade someone’s privacy. After those are overcome, snapping the shutter at the right moment is the magic.

Vivian had the ability to see the art in her subject matter. Her photographs are beautiful examples of otherwise mundane life. They implore one to look into and absorb the scene, so as to become a part of it.


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28
Oct 11

Seven Billion Is Such A BIG Number…

Which one are you?

There were 2.5 billion people in the world when I was born in 1947. We are scheduled to hit 7 Billion in the next day or two. That’s almost a three-fold growth in just 64 years. I just hope we can sustain and support the continued logarithmic growth.

I’ve read a couple fictional books about sustaining and supporting an over-populated world. Our increased life expectancy is wonderful, but unfortunately it places even greater burdens on our ability to feed, house, educate, and provide needed medical support.

Something to think about.

Try these books on for size:

Good reading… but be warned: These two books will haunt you long after you’ve read them. Although they are fiction, they are very believable and plausible.


28
Oct 11

Gates: Don’t try to be a billionaire, it’s overrated

That Bill, you gotta love him.

By James Milstid
Bill Gates recently made a rare appearance at the University of Washington. He talked about how technological advances are coming together for major advances in a couple areas he cares most about these days; education and efforts to help the poor people of the world.

The ensuing question and answer session was most memorable when a student asked him how she could become rich like him.

His answer?

“I can understand wanting to have millions of dollars, there’s a certain freedom, meaningful freedom, that comes with that. But once you get much beyond that, I have to tell you, it’s the same hamburger. Dick’s has not raised their prices enough,” he said, referring to the Seattle-area fast-food chain. “But being ambitious is good. You just have to pick what you enjoy doing.”

I truly appreciate his candid answer. Of course, it’s easy for him to say… he’s worth billions; somewhere around $49 billion. But with all the protests against greedy corporate executives these days, it’s refreshing to hear Mr. Gates speak honestly about being uber-rich.

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