Sep. 19th, 2020
Wired For Sound #2
Sep. 19th, 2020 04:17 amSome more wired sounds -
Botany - Vision of This Earth Before Our Time
From the album End the Summertime F(or)ever available September 25, 2020 on Western Vinyl.
Pre-order/stream: https://smarturl.it/zkbbw0
André Bratten - Silvester Anfang
Album - Silvester
℗ 2020 Smalltown Supersound
Released on: 2020-07-24
Alan Braufman - The Fire Still Burns
Album -The Fire Still Burns
℗ 2020 Valley of Search 2020 Valley of Search
Drums: Andrew Drury
Piano: Cooper-Moore
Tenor Saxophone: James Brandon Lewis
Upright Bass: Ken Filiano
Composer: Alan Braufman
Tashi Dorji - End of State, Part III
Track from LP "Stateless" by Tashi Dorji, out September 25, 2020 on Drag City.
Video by Jason Scott Furr
Art by Will Isenogle
Enjoy.
Botany - Vision of This Earth Before Our Time
From the album End the Summertime F(or)ever available September 25, 2020 on Western Vinyl.
Pre-order/stream: https://smarturl.it/zkbbw0
André Bratten - Silvester Anfang
Album - Silvester
℗ 2020 Smalltown Supersound
Released on: 2020-07-24
Alan Braufman - The Fire Still Burns
Album -The Fire Still Burns
℗ 2020 Valley of Search 2020 Valley of Search
Drums: Andrew Drury
Piano: Cooper-Moore
Tenor Saxophone: James Brandon Lewis
Upright Bass: Ken Filiano
Composer: Alan Braufman
Tashi Dorji - End of State, Part III
Track from LP "Stateless" by Tashi Dorji, out September 25, 2020 on Drag City.
Video by Jason Scott Furr
Art by Will Isenogle
Enjoy.
Word Of The Day
Sep. 19th, 2020 10:59 amToday's wonderful word is -
disambiguate
VERB
remove uncertainty of meaning from (an ambiguous sentence, phrase, or other linguistic unit).
"word senses can be disambiguated by examining the context"
What does disambiguate mean?
disambiguation - clarification that follows from the removal of ambiguity. clarification, elucidation, illumination - an interpretation that removes obstacles to understanding; "the professor's clarification helped her to understand the textbook". lexical disambiguation - disambiguation of the sense of a polysemantic word.
disambiguate
VERB
remove uncertainty of meaning from (an ambiguous sentence, phrase, or other linguistic unit).
"word senses can be disambiguated by examining the context"
What does disambiguate mean?
disambiguation - clarification that follows from the removal of ambiguity. clarification, elucidation, illumination - an interpretation that removes obstacles to understanding; "the professor's clarification helped her to understand the textbook". lexical disambiguation - disambiguation of the sense of a polysemantic word.
Wired For Sound #3
Sep. 19th, 2020 11:23 amMore from the recent Wire -
Sarah Davachi - Stations II
From the album 'Cantus, Descant' out now on Late Music - https://latemusic.ffm.to/cantusdescant
Video by Dicky Bahto
Bob Dylan - Crossing the Rubicon
His latest album , a double CD - 'Rough And Rowdy Ways'.
Tyler Higgins - Broken Blues
Album - Broken Blues
℗ 2020 Shhpuma Records
Released on: 2020-06-26
Pierre Henry - La Dixième Symphonie: Hommage À Beethoven VIII. Finale
Pierre Henry: La Dixième Symphonie - Hommage à Beethoven
℗ Radio France
Released on: 2020-09-04
Composer: Pierre Henry
Enjoy
Sarah Davachi - Stations II
From the album 'Cantus, Descant' out now on Late Music - https://latemusic.ffm.to/cantusdescant
Video by Dicky Bahto
Bob Dylan - Crossing the Rubicon
His latest album , a double CD - 'Rough And Rowdy Ways'.
Tyler Higgins - Broken Blues
Album - Broken Blues
℗ 2020 Shhpuma Records
Released on: 2020-06-26
Pierre Henry - La Dixième Symphonie: Hommage À Beethoven VIII. Finale
Pierre Henry: La Dixième Symphonie - Hommage à Beethoven
℗ Radio France
Released on: 2020-09-04
Composer: Pierre Henry
Enjoy
Peter Demetz "Prague in Black and Gold: The History of a City" (Penguin)

I found the book very informative and interesting. It’s organized into chapters, each one focusing on a historic period – the myth of Libuse and the archaeological evidence for the origin of Prague, the reign of Premyslid Otakar, the advances in the 14th c. under Charles IV, Jan Hus and his revolution, the reign of Rudolf II, the Age of Reform under Maria Theresa and Joseph II, industrialization and revolutions in the mid-19th century, and the formation of Czechoslovakia. I haven’t read any other books about Czech history so I can’t criticize which evidence/interpretations Demetz uses. However, he does spend a lot of time criticizing popular clichés and common misconceptions regarding Prague. I’ve definitely heard the one about Magic Prague (have Meyrink’s The Golem on the shelf and there was a Perutz about that) but he spends several paragraphs debunking myths about Jan Hus. For me that was unnecessary (no Hus preconceptions), but I could see how it could be helpful.
I appreciated the fact that Demetz didn’t just focus on the kings and famous revolutionaries, but spend many pages describing the changing Jewish community, the contributions of women, Germans and Italians, and the arts and culture of various ages in Prague. Because of the way the book was structured (subtitle - Scenes in the Life of a European City), there were some gaps when he’d pick up in a new chapter and some of the political backgrounds could be rushed. Also, Demetz describes the construction/demolition/reconstruction of many buildings and I think photographs or drawings would have been nice to include (google images were helpful). Most importantly, this book made me want to read more Czech history and related topics.

I found the book very informative and interesting. It’s organized into chapters, each one focusing on a historic period – the myth of Libuse and the archaeological evidence for the origin of Prague, the reign of Premyslid Otakar, the advances in the 14th c. under Charles IV, Jan Hus and his revolution, the reign of Rudolf II, the Age of Reform under Maria Theresa and Joseph II, industrialization and revolutions in the mid-19th century, and the formation of Czechoslovakia. I haven’t read any other books about Czech history so I can’t criticize which evidence/interpretations Demetz uses. However, he does spend a lot of time criticizing popular clichés and common misconceptions regarding Prague. I’ve definitely heard the one about Magic Prague (have Meyrink’s The Golem on the shelf and there was a Perutz about that) but he spends several paragraphs debunking myths about Jan Hus. For me that was unnecessary (no Hus preconceptions), but I could see how it could be helpful.
I appreciated the fact that Demetz didn’t just focus on the kings and famous revolutionaries, but spend many pages describing the changing Jewish community, the contributions of women, Germans and Italians, and the arts and culture of various ages in Prague. Because of the way the book was structured (subtitle - Scenes in the Life of a European City), there were some gaps when he’d pick up in a new chapter and some of the political backgrounds could be rushed. Also, Demetz describes the construction/demolition/reconstruction of many buildings and I think photographs or drawings would have been nice to include (google images were helpful). Most importantly, this book made me want to read more Czech history and related topics.