From 1956, Ernie Kovacs shows how to make a singing commercial.
August 28, 2009
August 27, 2009
Language Is a Virus
I swear, this was going to be the week I finally got back on a regular blogging schedule, so of course, this would have to be the week I was whacked by a norovirus, which has made me useless for the past few days. (Here's a great, gross norovirus fun fact for your inner 12-year-old boy:
Transmission is predominantly faecal-oral but may be airborne due to aerosolisation of vomitusEwwww. I spent a sleepless hour or two imagining ethereally audience-friendly Eric-Whitacre-esque five-part choral settings of that sentence, and the imaginary reaction of the equally imaginary bourgeois audience cheered me up.)
Anyway, one reason for the recent radio silence—though late-summer indolence has played a significant part, I'm not gonna lie—was in order to get a jump-start on a project which, now that all the glyphs have their requisite tittles, is no longer subject to my usual precipitately-announced-project jinx: a book on the cultural history of the opening of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony for Alfred A. Knopf (their logo is a dog! Moe approves). Is there anything at all more to be said about such an ubiquitous warhorse? Well, yeah, as it turns out—and a lot of what already has been said is long-lost fun, to say the least. Here's a bit from today's efforts:
Press corps parrot abductedAs far as I can tell, Coco was never heard from again. For the near future, expect this space to be largely occupied by Beethovenian trivia.
NICOSIA, Cyprus—A British journalist offered a $100 reward Wednesday for the safe return of Coco, the whistling parrot of the foreign press corps who was abducted by gunmen from a west Beirut hotel in last week's fighting.
The cash reward was made in messages sent by Coco's owner to west Beirut newspapers.
Coco, who for 10 years has lived at the Commodore hotel frequented by foreign journalists, was locally famous for imitating the whistling of an incoming shell. It also whistled the opening of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony and the French national anthem.—United Press International, February 25, 1987
August 23, 2009
House of Keys
Instrumental to his work and play. Peter Sykes and his keyboard arsenal. (Photos by Suzanne Kreiter.)
Boston Globe, August 23, 2009.
Boston Globe, August 23, 2009.
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Globe Articles
August 13, 2009
So the annual problem for our generation is finding a good way to spend it
Reviewing the Tanglewood Festival of Contemporary Music, part 2.
Boston Globe, August 13, 2009.
Boston Globe, August 13, 2009.
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Globe Articles
August 09, 2009
August 08, 2009
You cannot be serious
Reviewing Boston Midsummer Opera's Così fan tutte.
Boston Globe, August 8, 2009.
Boston Globe, August 8, 2009.
Labels:
Globe Articles
August 07, 2009
Today in Supercar Pantonality
From a press release announcing the new Lamborghini Gallardo LP 550-2 "Valentino Balboni":
Adjustments have also been made to the very heart of the Gallardo, the 5.2 litre ten-cylinder: the perfect synthesis of hi-revving pleasure, pulling power, a constantly exuberant temperament and a powerful symphony played in all keys.I bet Charles Ives could've gotten you a good insurance quote on that car.
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