July 14, 2015
Something in the tune
Tangent to the day's research: Jack Berger and His Hotel Astor Dance Orchestra's 1932 performance of "Something in the Night," with a vocal refrain by Jack Pearl, who was born Joshua Perelmuth, and who later changed his name to Jan Peerce.
BONUS RELATED TANGENT TO TODAY'S RESEARCH:
July 11, 2015
Agonistes
In memoriam Jon Vickers, who forged inimitable dramatic steel from the physical and moral contests of opera.
July 10, 2015
Adventures in postdating
It is time for the quarterly ritual of keeping this space on life support by at least linking to everything I've been doing elsewhere. That's three months of old-new articles to peruse (including a new batch of columns)—along with (as per usual) a compensatory drink:
Sip while reading good stuff elsewhere:
Robin James on the privilege of post-genre and Attali and neo-liberalism.
Ethan Iverson on James P. and also killer robots. (The conscious-to-subconscious progress of Doctor Who fandom described is my experience, too, although the differences between my personality and Ethan's can be pretty efficiently summed up by mentioning that my DW touchstone was not Genesis of the Daleks, but rather The Deadly Assassin.)
Peter Pesic and Axel Volmar on the musical rhetoric of string theory.
Charles Ames on the history of automated composition (including a lead sheet for "Push-Button Bertha").
Felix Arndt, "An Operatic Nightmare (Desecration no. 2)" (1916).
Slow Watch
Equal parts:lemon juiceplus a healthy dash of orange bitters
Cynar
peach liqueur
rye
Shake it up with small ice, strain into a rocks glass with big ice.
Sip while reading good stuff elsewhere:
Robin James on the privilege of post-genre and Attali and neo-liberalism.
Ethan Iverson on James P. and also killer robots. (The conscious-to-subconscious progress of Doctor Who fandom described is my experience, too, although the differences between my personality and Ethan's can be pretty efficiently summed up by mentioning that my DW touchstone was not Genesis of the Daleks, but rather The Deadly Assassin.)
Peter Pesic and Axel Volmar on the musical rhetoric of string theory.
Charles Ames on the history of automated composition (including a lead sheet for "Push-Button Bertha").
Felix Arndt, "An Operatic Nightmare (Desecration no. 2)" (1916).
July 01, 2015
Hit the North
Reviewing Blair McMillen.
Boston Globe, July 1, 2015.
Boston Globe, July 1, 2015.
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