Author's posts
May 19 2010
Results
As with Scott Brown, a message has been sent. The way my brother the activist put it-
This is not the change we voted for, and we’ll keep voting until we get it!
Particularly encouraging to me was the commentary on MSNBC. Even the dimmest bulb (and I admit it’s hard to find a single candlepower between them) seemed to understand that the voters of Pennsylvania and Arkansas are extremely unhappy with Beltway business as usual (though also as usual they refused to recognize their own mendacious complicity).
Last night was a clean sweep. The results could not have been any better. My congratulations and gratitude to those who helped make this victory possible.
And yet it is but an infinitesimal incremental step. Lost in the gasbag noise was the fact that Financial Reform is as gutted and useless as Health Care before it.
That’s why we can not give up.
It is our duty as citizens to speak up, not shut up. To point out as loudly and persistently as we can the failures and lies. To make their lives as uncomfortable and miserable as possible.
You see, the thing a bigot most craves is to be as bigoted as they want in public and either applauded for it or to intimidate others into silence. Just so these thieves. Their pompous egos fear the merest prick to their inflated sense of self importance. Did you see Specter’s concession? He couldn’t believe it. He was speechless.
Denying them our approval is the very least we can do.
And so this morning we wake with new resolve, fortified by the knowledge we can make a difference.
Si se puede.
Or as another blogger who posts here might say- Yell Louder.
May 19 2010
Chopin of the North
Edvard Grieg is pretty much the national composer of Norway the same way Sibelius is of Finland, quite an accomplishment for a Scotsman.
Actually, for a composer, he led a pretty normal life. Well traveled and mostly liked by his mid century contemporaries, he was a particularly gifted pianist. He wrote 5 songs dedicated to Louis Hornbeck which ingratiates him to me (not that there is any relation, like Athena I sprang fully formed from the head of Zeus).
Tonight’s pieces are two Piano Rolls where he demonstrates his virtuosity playing his own compositions.
The first one is Bridal Procession which can come in handy if you are on your Larry Kingth marriage and are tired of Mendelssohn’s Wedding March. The second is called Butterfly, Op. 43 #1, both posted by d60944.
What I notice about Piano Rolls in general is that the performances are quite up tempo compared to what I expected. This is reflective of the desires and talent of the composers, speed is one of the things they are best at preserving.
May 19 2010
Primary Open Thread
Well, Rand Paul in a blowout if you’d like a little schadenfreud at Mitch McConnell’s expense.
Early numbers for Sestak don’t look good. 42% reporting, Sestak 51% Specter 49%.
Halter leading. 62% reporting, Lincoln 43.3% Halter 42.6%.
Conway leading over Mongiardo 45% – 43%, 93% reporting. Looks like a win. AP calls it.
Critz 54% Burns 43%, 39% reporting. Murtha’s seat. 53% – 45%, 70% in, AP calls it.
2 Top Specter supporters say to Mrs. Greenspan it’s over. AP calls it. Concession should be within the hour. 10:25 EDT.
Toomey for the Thugs- AP.
Politico election results.
May 19 2010
Afternoon Edition
Afternoon Edition is an Open Thread
From Yahoo News Top Stories |
1 Fears grow that Gulf oil could strike Florida
by Clement Sabourin, AFP
2 hrs 36 mins ago
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AFP) – BP reported further progress Tuesday in stemming the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, but new evidence showed part of the slick could be swept to Florida’s beaches and sensitive coral reefs.
The British energy giant, which has been struggling to contain a month-long environmental disaster, said a tube inserted into a leaking oil pipe is now sucking up about 40 percent of the crude, twice as much as a day earlier. The company said its “riser insertion tube tool” is carrying about 2,000 barrels a day of oil up to the Discoverer Enterprise drill ship on the surface via a mile-long pipe. |
May 18 2010
The Jazz Singer
Jacques Offenbach was the son of a Cantor and his problem was that he was either too funny, or not quite funny enough.
You see, he made his mark as a composer and producer of Operettas that satirized not only the politics and culture of the day, but also the musical styles of other famous composers. If you don’t speak French perhaps the best way to think about him is as the Arthur Sullivan of Paris, only without quite as much pretension.
Instead of Gilbert he had a pair of lyricists that he commonly worked with, Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halevy.
The Second Empire had quite an appetite for frivolity and farce and Offenbach was very popular, but at the onset of the Franco Prussian War he was accused of being a Bismarkian mole and chased from Paris, based mostly on the unfortunate circumstances of his birth. You see, he wasn’t just a Jew, he was also born in Cologne.
He fled to Spain with his family and did some touring in Italy and Austria, but he really was quite a patriotic Frenchman and soon returned to Paris.
Alas the climate had changed. The Third Republic, as new regimes often do, ushered in a new puritanical spirit and farce and comedy were not as trendy as they once were. He was criticized by the Right for his disrespect for the Monarchy and Army, and by the Left as being a lapdog of the establishment and a sellout, including Emile Zola in the novel Nana.
Perhaps it’s not surprising, Zola was a ‘Naturalist’ author who couldn’t write a character without using cardboard, which is kind of a fundamental failing given his philosophy. Nietzsche on the other hand thought Offenbach 6 times the composer Wagner was, which is high praise indeed.
So he was harassed by the Police and forced into bankruptcy, but was able to make some money back with a tour of the U.S. and was able to mount a few more successful productions before his death in 1880.
Tonight’s piece, Les belles Américaines is a Waltz he composed late in his career. It was posted by ZIEHRER18431922.
May 18 2010
Afternoon Edition
Afternoon Edition is an Open Thread
From Yahoo News Top Stories |
1 BP says tube is containing one fifth of oil spill
by Clement Sabourin, AFP
2 hrs 44 mins ago
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AFP) – BP said Monday that about 20 percent of the oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico is being swallowed up by its insertion tube system, no longer feeding a giant slick off Louisiana.
But the British energy giant’s first concrete success in almost a month of efforts to tackle the spill risked being overshadowed by fears that huge underwater plumes of crude could be starving the waters of oxygen. “BP is burying its head in the sand on these underwater threats,” said Democratic congressman Ed Markey. |
May 17 2010
Hi-Yo Silver
Return with us now to those thrilling days of yesteryear.
His father Giuseppe was an inspector of slaughter houses until he was arrested in 1796 for French Revolutionary sympathies by the Austrians. While he was imprisoned his wife and son moved to Bologna were she made a living singing in theaters and upon Giuseppe’s release he joined her as a horn player in the bands where she sang.
Because his grandmother couldn’t handle him while his mom and dad were on the road, Rossini was apprenticed to a pork butcher and received his first musical instruction, which was not of very high quality. After about 3 years he switched to a blacksmith and found some better teachers. He had composed 6 String Sonatas by the age of twelve.
By the time he was 14 he had already composed his first Opera (though it would not be staged until he was 20) and he also gained admission to the Bologna Conservatory where he studied for 4 years before the debut of his first commercial production.
Italian music is all about the Opera and it’s hard to find a composer of note who hasn’t written a dozen or two. Rossini’s rise to fame was meteoric and by 21 he had already retired and had to be coaxed out of it at 23 when he received an offer from a Naples theater impresario he couldn’t refuse. In return for one Opera a year, 200 ducats a month and a cut from the tables in the theater Casino.
The Barber of Seville, while one of Rossini’s most famous, premiered to some controversy. Giovanni Paisiello had already written a fairly popular Opera with the same name and subject 25 years earlier and his supporters protested the opening with boos and cat-calls.
After his return to the stage Rossini produced about 20 Operas by 1823, some of the librettos of which were highly bowdlerized to appeal to the tastes of his audience. In 1822 he married one of his leading ladies and made a trip to Vienna where he was highly celebrated. After that he went to London where George IV gave him 7000 pounds for 5 months work, and then to Paris where he made 800 pounds a year as the Director of the Theatre des Italiens plus a contract from Charles X for 5 Operas a year.
He stayed there for 5 years before returning to Bologna in 1829. After that he composed but sporadically. His first wife died in 1845, he remarried in 1846. After leaving Bologna in 1848 due to the political unrest he eventually took up permanent residence in Paris where he devoted himself to the life of a foodie. At the time of his death in 1868 he was acclaimed as the greatest composer of Opera ever known.
The piece I have selected tonight is one of his Sins of Old Age, Salon Music he composed at his home in Paris after his retirement. This particular one, La Regata Veneziana, is a three song cycle posted by GermanOperaSinger and featuring Renata Tebaldi. She was born in Pesaro, the very same town as Rossini.
May 16 2010
Weekend News Digest
Weekend News Digest is an Open Thread
From Yahoo News Top Stories |
1 Tube has limited success in containing US oil leak
by Clement Sabourin, AFP
1 hr 9 mins ago
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AFP) – BP succeeded Sunday in capturing some oil and gas by inserting a mile-long tube into the main Gulf of Mexico leak, but did not say what percentage of the gusher was being contained.
A statement on the latest efforts to control the massive slick off Louisiana and stave off an environmental disaster said a tube had been inserted into the leaking pipe overnight and captured “some amounts of oil and gas.” The process, which saw oil sucked up as if through a straw to a giant drill ship on the surface, comes after US President Barack Obama blasted the companies involved for seeking to shift blame and shirk responsibility. |
May 16 2010
Junior
There are an awful lot of Strausses in German music (and I include Austrian in that category though purists would say I probably shouldn’t). Johann Strauss was a very successful Viennese band leader and composer who was instrumental in the development of the Waltz, a sexually revolutionary dance where couples actually danced in a (gasp) closed position.
Being such a dangerous degenerate he was of course wildly popular and toured with his band all over Europe and even performed at Queen Victoria’s coronation.
Like most successful Rock Stars the last thing he wanted was for his own (legitimate) family to follow in his footsteps of constant adulation and debauchery so for his sons he selected the professions of military and foreign service, and banking,
After he acknowledged his libertine ways by recognizing one of his illegitimate daughters, his wife divorced him and Junior, the banker, was free to take up his own musical career for which his father never forgave him.
While never quite as popular during his father’s lifetime as his Dad, Junior was quite popular indeed and soon had a band of his own. When there was a revolution in Vienna in 1848 Junior sided with the Revolutionaries while Dad supported the Monarchy. Junior was arrested for playing The Marseillaise in public, no doubt as part of his father’s Paris-Walzer which used the theme because Junior frequently performed Dad’s music.
Senior died the year after that and Junior took over his band. When, after 4 years of constant touring, he took a little mental vacation, he recruited his brothers to run the band while he was resting.
Junior eventually eclipsed his father in fame and composed and performed constantly until his death at the turn of the century. He was so influential that Hitler, rather than admit Junior’s Jewish heritage, had his birth records stolen and famously declared, “I decide who is Jewish.”
See, he was a deciderer too.
Any way tonight’s piece is Weiner Blut Op. 354, posted by TheWickedNorth.
May 16 2010
Weekend News Digest
Weekend News Digest is an Open Thread
From Yahoo News Top Stories |
1 US asks BP to clarify cleanup intentions as Gulf spill gushes on
by Clement Sabourin, AFP
54 mins ago
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AFP) – Crews worked to place a siphon tube into a ruptured pipe spilling oil into the Gulf of Mexico Saturday as globs of oil washed ashore in new spots and US officials told BP to clarify what cleanup costs it will pay.
The latest effort by British Petroleum to contain the thousands of gallons of oil spilling into the Gulf involves connecting an “insertion tube” to the leak site so oil can be siphoned to a container vessel at the surface. The process was supposed to be completed overnight, but aligning the pieces under water proved more complex than expected, and a frame connected to the pipe had to be brought back up to the surface to be adjusted, BP said. |
May 15 2010
The First Existentialist?
Camile Saint-Saens is another one of those child prodigy musical geniuses who could read and write at 3, was composing at 4, and performing in public at 5. He was an expert Mathmatician and in addition to scholarly articles on acoustics, occult sciences, Roman theatre decoration, and ancient instruments, wrote a volume on Philosophy, Problems and Mysteries, about Science and Art replacing Religion; the pessimistic and atheistic ideas of which read like an early version of Existentialism. He also wrote a book of poetry and a theatrical farce as well as several travelogues.
He was considered the greatest organist in the world by Liszt but other contemporaries found his style, while technically flawless, mechanical and devoid of spirit. When he played he sat rock still, only his fingers, hands, and arms moving.
Speaking of philosophy, he underwent some remarkable changes of mind in the course of his life. Initially a big fan of Wagner he cooled on him considerably after the Franco-Prussian War. From being a ground breaking progressive in his early career, he came to despise the work of Impressionists like Debussy, Strauss, and Stravinsky.
Today, of course, his most performed work is the one he most hated- Carnival of the Animals; so much so that he suppressed it’s publication until after his death for fear it would make him look less “serious”. Now it’s a staple of Children’s Concerts along with Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf and Britten’s The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra. As a child I loved the 12th Movement, Fossils, because of that crazy Xylophone.
I wanted to find Opus 128, his film score for The Assassination of the Duke of Guise– he was the first major composer to do one. Alas it appears to be unavailable except to those who have better YouTube search skills than I. Instead you will have to settle for an episode of The Shadow which uses the middle section of Le rouet d’Omphale Op. 31 as its theme.
This episode, Triangle of Death, features Orson Wells as The Shadow. Also Borodin. It was posted by TheRadioGhost in three parts, the last 2 of which are below the fold.
May 14 2010
Afternoon Edition
Afternoon Edition is an Open Thread
From Yahoo News Top Stories |
1 Obama blasts oil companies over growing spill
by Sara Hussein, AFP
1 hr 22 mins ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) – US President Barack Obama hit out at oil companies for trying to shift blame for the Gulf of Mexico slick Friday and vowed to end the “cozy” ties between the industry and government regulators.
In an unusually harsh tone, Obama said he had ordered “top to bottom” reform of the federal agency that oversees oil drilling, and announced a review of the enforcement of environmental protection rules. He hit out at the three oil companies linked to the sunken rig gushing oil into the Gulf for seeking to pass the blame, denouncing what he called a “ridiculous spectacle” by their top officials during congressional hearings. |