Aug. 28th, 2016

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One album that still resonates with me after all these years because its truth is so strong and universal - a social consciousness indeed. 

The full album is here-

MARVIN GAYE - WHAT'S GOING ON

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFaUr3ZCNbU&list=PLfYUcenVtXMZo1tQ6g4G0IkwxvLN0AqC2

Zankou

Aug. 28th, 2016 01:25 am
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One of my fave Charmed episodes -

Something Wicca This Way Goes

The final ep of season 7 when they defeat Zankou


Sisters Astral Projecting

Zankou Being Vanquished

Glamour

Cool News

Aug. 28th, 2016 01:33 am
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So i had a couple of beers at Spoons -   they went down well plus i had a minor celebration anyway.

Security - the Quays confirmed that the council will pay my housing benefit and backdated to when i moved in. Had the letter from the council the other day.

I feel very happy right now.
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More lovely Harrison music -

Lou Harrison - Double Concerto for Violin and Cello with Javanese Gamelan (1981/1982)





Lou Harrison (1917-2003): Double Concerto for Violin and Cello with Javanese Gamelan (1981/1982) -- Kenneth Goldsmith, violins; Terry King, cello -- The Mills College Gamelan Ensemble (with Lou Harrison) --

I. Grandly, but moderate
II. Stampede
III. Allegro moderato


Lou Harrison - Piano Concerto (1983/1985)



Lou Harrison (1917-2003): Piano Concerto (1983/1985).

I. Allegro 0:01
II. Stampede 11:44
III. Largo 21:28
IV. Allegro moderato 30:05

Keith Jarrett, pianoforte

New Japan Philharmonic directed by Naoto Otomo.
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Much cooler today - around 22 degrees C - so perhaps we have seen the last of the hot days and forecast is for some mixed weather anyway. Tuesday seems to the best day this coming week with temps up to 26 and being very sunny.

Yesterday i watched one of the DVD's Bro sent me - The Possession - a creepy scary horror movie, which i have already mentioned in a previous post. Repeating myself there. Today i will probably watch the Steve Jobs biopic or Vertigo. Maybe both.

Currently i am in Wetherspoons having the unlimited filter coffee. I might look around the Lidl store and see what food they have got. I fancy a pizza today.
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Alan Bennett "Six Poets : Hardy to Larkin: An Anthology by Alan Bennett"(Faber and Faber)



The Six Poets; Thomas Hardy, A.E. Housman, John Betjeman, W.H. Auden, Louis MacNeice and Philip Larkin are each dealt with in turn. Alan Bennett talks about each poet and gives you a selection of their work. The content is very good although in some instances you can't help wishing that Alan Bennett had chosen your own particular favourites(!) but it is of course better that he didn't as this selection will broaden your view - which can't be bad.

To give an idea of Bennett's style here, he begins his essay on Auden with "Much of Auden, even most of Auden…I do not understand." I know I'm in good hands when I read things like that – and he goes on to quote Isherwood's explanation of the obscurity of some of Auden's writing: that Auden used to save up favourite lines and then group them together "entirely regardless of grammar or sense." But as well as this quite genuine expression of intellectual humility, in the same essay Bennett quotes Kierkegaard, this time to illustrate two aspect of Auden's life: "There are two ways: one is to suffer; the other is to become a professor of the fact that another suffers." He also reports that Auden and his partner lived in some squalor and after a rather stomach-churning anecdote remarks, "One wonders where did one wash one's hands after washing one's hands."

This mixture of clarity, honesty, insight, intellectual brilliance and real wit pervades the entire book and makes it a huge pleasure. He also selects the poems very well, from the very well-known like Housman's "Into my heart an air that kills" to the (to me) obscure, surprising and wonderful discoveries like Hardy's At The Draper's. He uses them to illustrate his points very well and to give a very good picture of the breadth and development of each poet's work.

Bennett celebrates both the direct and the obscure and writes illuminatingly on both. His love of poetry as a form and of its capabilities shines through, summed up in this remark on Betjeman and Larkin: "Both…wrote straightforward poetry that didn't need much exposition. But it's also the case that poetry, though we don't learn it by heart nowadays, and though there is no poetic equivalent of the Booker Prize, still has magic and seems magical." Well, quite – and if you have any interest at all in poetry or if you just like to read great critical writing, don't hesitate. This is a joy from start to finish and very warmly recommended.

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Well i had to choose them because of the Bennett book -



The Darkling Thrush
Poem by Thomas Hardy


I leant upon a coppice gate,
When Frost was spectre-gray,
And Winter's dregs made desolate
The weakening eye of day.
The tangled bine-stems scored the sky
Like strings of broken lyres,
And all mankind that haunted nigh
Had sought their household fires.

The land's sharp features seemed to me
The Century's corpse outleant,
Its crypt the cloudy canopy,
The wind its death-lament.
The ancient pulse of germ and birth
Was shrunken hard and dry,
And every spirit upon earth
Seemed fervorless as I.

At once a voice arose among
The bleak twigs overhead,
In a full-hearted evensong
Of joy illimited.
An aged thrush, frail, gaunt and small,
With blast-beruffled plume,
Had chosen thus to fling his soul
Upon the growing gloom.

So little cause for carolings
Of such ecstatic sound
Was written on terrestrial things
Afar or nigh around,
That I could think there trembled through
His happy good-night air
Some blessed Hope, whereof he knew,
And I was unaware.

Thomas Hardy


Nothing To Be Said
Poem by Philip Larkin



For nations vague as weed,
For nomads among stones,
Small-statured cross-faced tribes
And cobble-close families
In mill-towns on dark mornings
Life is slow dying.

So are their separate ways
Of building, benediction,
Measuring love and money
Ways of slow dying.
The day spent hunting pig
Or holding a garden-party,

Hours giving evidence
Or birth, advance
On death equally slowly.
And saying so to some
Means nothing; others it leaves
Nothing to be said.
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I feel blessed that i am in good health and hearty and it made me wonder how Shannen (Prue to Charmed devotees) is doing - this id from the latest Wiki update.




"In August, 2015, Shannen announced that she is battling breast cancer. She was first diagnosed in March 2015.[1] Nothing more was released about the battle until Wednesday 20 July, 2016, when Shannen — in a six-part Instagram post — showed the journey of shaving her head. Alyssa Milano reposted one of the posts with the caption "Shannen, we are all in your corner wishing you health and love! #cancersucks". Rose McGowan reposted one of the photos as well, asking her followers to send strength to Shannen.


In early August, 2016, Shannen noted that she had undergone a single mastectomy, however, the during the surgery, the doctor discovered that the cancer had spread to her lymph nodes with the possibility of further spreading. Doherty states that "They're just breasts. In the grand scheme of things, I would rather be alive and I would rather grow old with my husband." Shannen will undergo further chemotherapy and if needed, radiation. Shannen believes that living with one breast is manageable, but she fears for the future and a possible recurrence of the cancer. Doherty had an expander fitted in place of the removed breast."
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Bobby Hutcherson, the jazz vibraphone and marimba player, passed away this month on the 15th. Here is some of his oeuvre -

Bobby Hutcherson - Hangin' Out (With You)




More jazz here )
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More jazz grooves - aren't you lucky people!

Stanley Cowell - Come Sunday



Stanley Cowell - piano ;
Cecil McBee - bass ;
Roy Haynes - drums ;
Kenneth Nash - percussion ;
Terry Adams - cello ;
Nate Rubin - violin ;
Robert Mandolph, Linda Mandolph, Judy Lacey - vocals.

Written by Duke Ellington.
Arranged and conducted by Stanley Cowell.

More jazz here )

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