music, thoughts, books, dreams, more

Just my world of dreams, music and thoughts. Author of two books, one a novel of Love stories set in Framingham, Mass, Secrets of the Heart the 2nd book an autobiography of growing up in Framingham, Mass. Small Town America, Framingham My generation was the first teenage generation, that was when the word was coined. Ours was the generation that started cruising through town and to the drive in theater and drive in restaurant. In our area, Ernie Kampersal,from Holliston, drove his bucking car through town, picking up girls. It rose in the air, like a stallion! We went to the soda shops and played the juke boxes. It was a different town, a different time, and it belonged to us!

Thursday, June 20, 2013

NEWPORT RHODE ISLAND WEEKEND FUN

Hi, just a reminder that you're receiving this email because you have expressed an interest in Newport Mansions® Stores and/or NewportStyle.net. Don't forget to add newportstyle@newportmansions.org to your address book so we'll be sure to land in your inbox!
 
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Don't Forget!

Preservation Society Members always receive 10% off!
Great Events in June! 



Celebrating 20 years at Bannister's Wharf

We have an anniversary to celebrate! 
The Newport Mansions® Store on Bannister's Wharf has been open for 20 years. Join us to celebrate this great milestone with a week of fun events and giveaways, June 22-30.

Prizes include Newport Mansions Store gift certificates, Preservation Society of Newport County household membership, even a chance to win a sunset sail for 2! Plus many more...


The 2013 Newport Flower Show



Visit us at the Flower Show!
 
 Every June the Newport Mansions Stores
turn up the heat at the Newport Flower Show. This weekend we have some great new Asian-inspired products relating to the show theme 'Jade: Eastern Obsessions'

Buy your tickets today and be sure to visit our booth and membership table at the show!
Thank you for shopping at NewportStyle.net. As the online home of the Newport Mansions® Stores, we strive to feature quality products that evoke the Newport lifestyle. Whether you are looking for a gift for yourself or a loved one, we'd like to be the first place you shop. 
 
At NewportStyle.net you are sure to find something special!
 
Sincerely,
Newport Style


Free
Gift!*

 
Purchase over $100* in Mariposa items and we'll send you a free Mariposa tea light candle holder!

Limited quantities available, shop now!
offer valid in stores & online - offer ends June 30th
Newport Style Contact Us

Hi, just a reminder that you're receiving this email because you have expressed an interest in Newport Mansions® Stores and/or NewportStyle.net. Don't forget to add newportstyle@newportmansions.org to your address book so we'll be sure to land in your inbox!
 
You may unsubscribe if you no longer wish to receive our emails.



 
 
Quick Links
  

 

 

Black Stripes

 
Don't Forget!

Preservation Society Members always receive 10% off!
Great Events in June! 



Celebrating 20 years at Bannister's Wharf

We have an anniversary to celebrate! 
The Newport Mansions® Store on Bannister's Wharf has been open for 20 years. Join us to celebrate this great milestone with a week of fun events and giveaways, June 22-30.

Prizes include Newport Mansions Store gift certificates, Preservation Society of Newport County household membership, even a chance to win a sunset sail for 2! Plus many more...


The 2013 Newport Flower Show



Visit us at the Flower Show!
 
 Every June the Newport Mansions Stores
turn up the heat at the Newport Flower Show. This weekend we have some great new Asian-inspired products relating to the show theme 'Jade: Eastern Obsessions'

Buy your tickets today and be sure to visit our booth and membership table at the show!
Thank you for shopping at NewportStyle.net. As the online home of the Newport Mansions® Stores, we strive to feature quality products that evoke the Newport lifestyle. Whether you are looking for a gift for yourself or a loved one, we'd like to be the first place you shop. 
 
At NewportStyle.net you are sure to find something special!
 
Sincerely,
Newport Style


Free
Gift!*

 
Purchase over $100* in Mariposa items and we'll send you a free Mariposa tea light candle holder!

Limited quantities available, shop now!
offer valid in stores & online - offer ends June 30th
Newport Style Contact Us

Helen Forrest & Benny Goodman Orch. - When The Sun Comes Out

how did I ever forget this song.  I was reminded of it on facebook.  This is one of the great arrangements of the past.

Jo Stafford - Something To Remember You By

stuck with me since yesterday so I had to play it again...

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Lucille♪

Goin' way way back and jiving with Little Richard

Johnny B. Goode - Jeff Beck / Santana / Steve Lukather

We're jumpin' more than cruisin' today!

Cause We've Ended As Lovers - Jeff Beck -

Jeff Beck, where are you?

Taking a chance on love by Ella Fitzgerald with lyrics

 Miss Velvet...and the song was a dream

Joe Bonamassa Gibson and Epiphone Les Paul video demo Guitarist magazine HD

guitar lovers delight

Joe Bonamassa on Jools Holland

Eric Clapton speaks for this guitarist...so lets give him a listen....Wow!

John Pizzarelli - Route 66

Feel the time...in this song..we had cars and a longing to drive, to see the world, we were teens!  The world was our oyster after the 2nd World War ended, we had so many things starting to happen, washing machines, refrigerators, cars, they all changed their clothes and got hip!  So did we!

Route 66 - Bing Crosby & The Andrews Sisters

The mystery of Route 66, was our , or my dream to find....when I heard this song, way long ago....

Judy Garland & Jose Iturbi - The Joint Is Really Jumping Down at Carnegi...

Jose Iturbi learns to Jive, Boogie Woogie, with Judy Garland....

Friday, June 14, 2013

Svelte and a little etymology today

Voynich News


Posted: 13 Jun 2013 01:09 AM PDT
When I was young, I often used to play Scrabble with my grandmother Win on my way home from school. (By which I mean her maisonette was on my route home, not that we played Scrabble on the bus.) Which probably helps account for the deep-rooted enjoyment I still get from weird and wonderful words, many decades later.
From way back then, my favourite English word has always been “svelte” (though “tergiversate” was nipping at its heels for a couple of weeks last year). The reason I particularly like svelte is that it’s (I’m struggling to describe) ‘productively onomatopoeic’, in that the slow ‘l’-sound in the middle makes it feels elegant (indeed svelte) on the tongue. Really, it’s a word with an unusual (but nicely matching) mouth feel, one that manages to stand out from a dictionary sized pack. With getting too synaesthetic on you, to me it’s a kind of David Gower four of a word, a left-handed ping that’s over the boundary before the fielders even notice it’s gone. Something can’t be half-svelte, it’s either got it or it hasn’t.
Svelte also brings right to the fore the mad ragtag heterogeneity of English, the arbitrary coupling together of chance encounters over the millennia. To some it sounds
SvedishSwedish (or perhaps a piece of stray Elvish?) but it’s actually a French word (svelte), from an Italian (svelto, “stretched out”), from Vulgar Latin (ex + vellere, i.e. to stretch + out).
(You might therefore suspect that it shares some kind of origin with “vellum” which is also stretched out, but the latter has its roots in “veal”, i.e. young calves: hence vellum is properly fine calfskin.)
Languages are like that: for all their modern apologists, academies, and syntactic niceties, they’re at heart accidental rather than designed. Esperanto and all the other modern conlangs are all very well, but a good part of the charm of real-world languages is the way stray and mongrel words hop in to fill the semantic gaps that inevitably open up as culture mutates and evolves. English obviously needed a word that expressed presence of svelteness in an object, why else would svelte have succeeded and persisted otherwise?
But (and isn’t there always a but in Cipher Mysteries)… where’s all that in the Voynich Manuscript’s language? Even if William Friedman was completely and utterly wrong about the Voynich’s being an artificial constructed language (which he was), I really can see exactly why he thought & believed that. For Voynichese words show such a strong family resemblance – a strongly interlinked productive grammar, if you will – that it almost precludes anything else. Whatever Voynichese is, there is definitely an artificiality to it, or at least an abundance of artifice. I suspect that anyone trying to map Voynichese onto a direct language base will almost inevitably find (to their eventual embarrassment) that it’s just too artificial to be workable: and that’s pretty much what Elizebeth Friedman concluded too.
So here’s your Voynich paradox for the day. I’m sure that there can be no “svelte” in the Voynichese ‘language’ as we see it, because the overwhelming majority of its words arise from a compact productive grammar quite unlike that of a real, heterogeneous, messy, accidental, historic language: and yet the look of Voynichese so resembles a language that it’s hard not to feel as though you’re perpetually a mini-dictionary away from just reading it.
Of course, for me the resolution of this paradox comes down to a well-chosen bunch of steganographic tricks (such as verbose cipher, shorthand, etc) that serve to conceal the plaintext in a misleading form… but you will no doubt have your own theories about how to slice through such a Gordian knot. icon smile The Svelte Voynich...
The post The Svelte Voynich… appeared first on Cipher Mysteries.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Soft Summer Breeze - Eddie Heywood. 1956 played on a Bang & Olufsen tur...

this was a big hit with me...again a worn out record, I had a Bang and Olufsen..and that is a 45 record, note the table is set for a 78 size, and we would put a center clip in the middle of the 45, the arm would then come all the way to the 45, so the player could play both the 45 and the 78....I sat on a pile of 78's...whoa! 

Liberace - Bumble Boogie

Now, you can really appreciate this...did you see the movie ?  I missed it

Keyboard Conversations - The Flight Of The Bumblebee

Something different

"Route 66" - The Manhattan Transfer (2008)

I love the Manhattan Transfer, and this is a song of the times...I have been entertaining with the last song, and Billy Eckstein....all before the war....when Rt 66 was the way across the United States....

"The Java Jive" (Ink Spots, 1940)

This was a hot hot song back in the late 40's when I became aware of it....

Billy Eckstine - I Apologize

This is a great song from the past ....and Billy Eckstine did it best!

Billy Eckstine - Blue moon

there was a quality to his voice, that called you back to listen again and again.

Billy Eckstine - Prisoner of Love

Billy Eckstine, had a wonderful voice...wore his records out!

Buddy Holly Peggy Sue with Lyrics

Another one of my favorites from long ago...and I loved the movie.

Billy Joel - Uptown Girl

 Just love this song, one of the best for Billy Joel..

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Swing Time - Rogers and Astaire

and now the Maestro of the movies.....Fred with Ginger!   Note the spats with his tails...

1920's - Quickstep Vs Charleston

 Happy Feet, you can see how stilted the dancers were versus the jitterbug, which was adapted from these dances...

Chick Webb's Orch. & Ella Fitzgerald! - My Heart Belongs To Daddy, 1939

the young Ella's voice...she was often singing with Chick Webb...

Cab Calloway - Minnie The Moocher 1930

The signature tune for Cab Calloway....you always knew when you heard this that Cab Calloway was coming on...

Cab Calloway and Nicholas Brothers performing 'Jumpin Jive'.

What dancers! What energy between Cab Calloway singing, the band playing and the two brothers dancing.   Those splits had to be killers!

Chattanooga Choo Choo!

Lots of dancing in those days...see the spats on the feet of the men....Spats where originally to keep mud off socks and shoes, soldiers wore them, then they became part of the dress when a man was dressed to go someplace special...and dancers wore them, especially remember Fred Astair wearing them.

TEX BENEKE ~ GIVE ME FIVE MINUTES MORE ~ 1946

  Now we are graduating to Jitter Bug....some people tried to Charleston to this, but the jitterbug was more fun, easier to dance and not as stilted...more free form...

Napoleon Chagnon, and primitive societies...what we are learning from them




[ED NOTE: The following EDGE event took place April 29th in Cambridge. It's not
hyperbole to say that it's one of the most significant events in our sixteen
year history. Great reading and viewing, all 30,000 words and several hours of
video. Get busy!  -JB]

====================================================================================================

"Napoleon Chagnon is a Living World Treasure. Arguably our greatest
anthropologist." - Richard Dawkins, from the Introduction

NAPOLEON CHAGNON: BLOOD IS THEIR ARGUMENT
An Edge Special Event
Napoleon Chagnon, Steven Pinker, Richard Wrangham, Daniel C. Dennett, David Haig

Introduction by Richard Dawkins
Permalink: http://www.edge.org/conversation/napoleon-chagnon-blood-is-their-argument

[Thanks to Steven Pinker for initiating and facilitating this Edge Special Event
with Napoleon Chagnon, the last of the great ethnographers.]

THE REALITY CLUB: Lionel Tiger, Paul Seabright, Dominic Johnson, Azar Gat,
Daniel Everett

----------

INTRODUCTION
By Richard Dawkins

Chagnon's extraordinary body of work will long be mined, not just by
anthropologists but by psychologists, humanists, litterateurs, scientists of all
kinds: mined for . . .  who knows what insights into the deep roots of our
humanity?

Napoleon Chagnon is a Living World Treasure. Arguably our greatest
anthropologist, he is brave on two fronts. As a field worker in the Amazon
forest he has lived, intimately and under conditions of great privation, with
The Fierce People at considerable physical danger to himself. But the wooden
clubs and poison-tipped arrows of the Yanomamö were matched by the verbal clubs
and toxic barbs of his anthropologist colleagues in the journal pages and
conference halls of the United States. And it is not hard to guess which
armamentarium was the more disagreeable to him.

Chagnon committed the unforgivable sin, cardinal heresy in the eyes of a certain
kind of social scientist: he took Darwin seriously. Along with a few friends and
colleagues, Chagnon studied the up-to-date literature on natural selection
theory, and with brilliant success he applied the ideas of Fisher, Hamilton,
Trivers and other heirs of Darwin to a human tribe which probably ran as close
to the cutting edge of natural selection as any in the world. It is sobering to
reflect on how unconventional a step this was: science bursting into the
quasi-literary world of the anthropology in which the young Chagnon was trained.
Still today, in many American departments of social science, for a young
researcher to announce a serious interest in Darwin's dangerous idea—even an
inclination towards scientific thinking at all—can come close to career suicide.

In Chagnon's case the animosity spilled over from mere academic disagreement to
personal slander, which was not merely untrue but diametrically opposite to the
truth about this ethnographer and his decent and humane relationship with his
subjects and friends. The episode serves as a dark lesson in what can happen
when ideology is allowed to poison the well of academic study. While it is
thankfully in the past, it blighted Chagnon's career, and I don't know whether
the lesson for social science has been adequately learned.

Chagnon came along at just the right time for the Yanomamö and for scientific
anthropology. Encroaching civilisation was about to close the last window on a
tribal world that embodied vanishing clues to our own prehistory: a world of
forest "gardens", of kin-groups fissioning into genetically salient sub-groups,
of male combat over women and trans-generational revenge, complex alliances and
enmities; webs of calculated obligation, debt, grudge and gratitude that might
underlie much of our social psychology and even law, ethics and economics.
Chagnon's extraordinary body of work will long be mined, not just by
anthropologists but by psychologists, humanists, litterateurs, scientists of all
kinds: mined for . . .  who knows what insights into the deep roots of our
humanity?

In his unique role as salon-host and impresario for science, John Brockman has
performed what will come to be seen as an enduring service, by bringing Napoleon
Chagnon together with four of today's leading Third Culture intellectuals:
Daniel Dennett, Steven Pinker, Richard Wrangham and David Haig. Separately and
in teams, these penetrating minds, combining deep scholarship with a rare
ability to communicate and entertain, converse with Napoleon Chagnon and shed
and reflect light on the life-work of a great anthropologist and a brave man.

                                                                            
—Richard Dawkins
----------

PART ONE: NAPOLEON CHAGNON & STEVEN PINKER (WITH DANIEL C. DENNETT & DAVID HAIG)

"I first walked into the Yanomamö village thinking I was going to do the
perfunctory one-year field research or maybe less, go back to my university,
write my doctoral dissertation, publish a book maybe, after two or three years
of thinking about it, then return to the tribe ten years later and do the
expected thing about,  "Woe is me, what has the world and technology done to my
people?" But the minute I walked into my first Yanomamö village I realized that
I was witnessing a really precious thing, and I knew I would have to come back
again and again. And I did." EDGE Video [1:00:58]

----------

DISCUSSION: CHAGNON, PINKER, DENNETT, HAIG

Edge.org
JUne 10, 2013
http://www.edge.org

"The Yanomamö are very valuable now as a commodity. They are the largest most
interesting and romanticized tribe in the entire Amazon basin, maybe in the
world. They live in an area that is threatened by ecological destruction, so
there are people who are interested in saving the rain forest, and people who
are interested in saving the natives. And these groups collaborate with each
other. Everybody wants the Yanomamö in their portfolio." EDGE Video [30:43]

-----------

PART TWO: NAPOLEON CHAGNON & RICHARD WRANGHAM (WITH DANIEL C. DENNETT & DAVID
HAIG)

"What I've discovered is that life was very much filled with terror of your
neighbors, constantly in a position—sort of like Hobbes’ argument—foul weather
is not a shower or two but a tendency thereto for months on end. So you always
have your eye open to the frontier and try to make sure that the guys out there
are on the other side of the moat." EDGE Video [33:52]

----------

DISCUSSION: CHAGNON, WRANGHAM, DENNETT, HAIG

Big villages lord over small villages. So if you're seeking an ally who will
protect you from the buggers up the hill who are bigger than you, you're at a
disadvantage because in order to get allies, you've got to give women to them.
It’s an economics game where the smaller village has to pay up front for the
privileges of the alliance, and the bigger village tends to default on many of
its agreements. So big villages tend to exploit small villages. It's always a
good idea to live in a big village; however, it's like living in a powder keg.
EDGE Video [20:47]

----------

NAPOLEON CHAGNON is a renowned anthropologist who is most widely recognized for
his study of the Yanomamö tribes in the Amazon. He is a professor of
anthropology at the University of Missouri; Author, Noble Savages: My Life Among
Two Dangerous Tribes—the Yanomamö and the Anthropologists.

STEVEN PINKER, psychologist, is Johnstone Family Professor, Department of
Psychology; Harvard University; Author, The Better Angles of Our Nature: Why
Violence Has Declined; The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature.

RICHARD WRANGHAM is Ruth Moore Professor of Biological Anthropology, Curator of
Primate Behavioral Biology at Harvard University; Author, Catching Fire: How
Cooking Made Us Human; (coauthor) Demonic Males: Apes, and the Origins Of Human
Violence.

DANIEL C. DENNETT is Austin B. Fletcher Professor of Philosophy, & Co-Director,
Center for Cognitive Studies, Tufts University; Author, Intuition Pumps and
Other Tools for Thinking; Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of
Life.

DAVID HAIG, evolutionary geneticist/theorist, is Associate Professor of Biology
in Harvard's Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, with an interest
in conflicts and conflict resolution within the genome, and genomic imprinting
and relations between parents and offspring; Author, Genomic Imprinting and
Kinship.

RICHARD DAWKINS, evolutionary biologist, is Emeritus Professor of the Public
Understanding of Science, Oxford; Author, The Greatest Show on Earth; The
Selfish Gene. He was recently ranked #1 in Prospect Magazine's poll of "World
Thinkers 2013".

----------

THE REALITY CLUB

Lionel Tiger: "This began as an exhilarating exercise celebrating the verve and
intelligence of a colleague and friend who has made serious contribution to
understanding human beings. However it unexpectedly veered to a mood of rue and
woe about the stolid incompetence of countless disciplineless scholars as they
survey the human condition." ...

Paul Seabright: "Probably no single phrase cost Napoleon Chagnon more enemies
than when he wrote that the Yanomamo live « in a state of chronic warfare ».
More than four decades on, the evidence that many human societies without a
state have lived with high levels of violence over long periods is now very
strong." ...

Dominic Johnson: "Force is a means of achieving the external ends of states
because there exists no consistent, reliable process of reconciling the
conflicts of interest that inevitably arise among similar units in a condition
of anarchy." This was Kenneth Waltz, one of the fathers of international
relations, writing about the behavior of nation-states in the international
system. But it could just as well have been written about the Yanomamo, the
"fierce people" of the Amazon." ...

Azar Gat: "Napoleon A. Chagnon's made a seminal and supreme contribution to both
anthropology and the application of evolutionary theory to the understanding of
human society. I shall not repeat the lavish praises justly bestowed on his
life's work, to which we are all hugely indebted. Instead, I would like to point
out one misstep he took in the course of his controversies on the causes of
primitive warfare, which somewhat diverted the argument in a wrong direction
with respect to both that subject and the actual meaning and significance of
evolutionary theory."

Daniel L. Everett: "...What impressed me about Nap's writing was what has
impressed generations of anthropologists, students, and other intellectuals—his
effortless interweaving of personal experience with rigorous ethnographic
description of the people he was living among, the "sons of god" (what
"Yan–omam" means in English, according to one Yanomam, Davi Kopenawa whom I met
many years ago, though I haven't seen this definition elsewhere)." …


----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------

Follow EDGE on Twitter: https://twitter.com/edge

---------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------
IN THE NEWS
---------------------------------------------------
THIS WEEK
Fareed Zakaria's 6 favorite books
June 2, 2013

1. The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker (Penguin, $20). A monumental
achievement. Pinker, a Harvard psychology professor, draws on 5,000 years of
historical evidence to explain in fascinating detail how violence has declined
across human history. More broadly, he shows that human beings have learned to
treat each other better in general.

2. Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $16).
Most "idea books" are bloated essays; this one, from a Nobel Prize–winning
economist, is worth reading all the way through. Kahneman offers a fascinating
set of ideas about how human beings think and reason, for better and worse.

3. The Righteous Mind by Jonathan Haidt (Vintage, $16). A brilliant mixture of
political philosophy and sociology. According to Haidt, two reasonable people
can find themselves on opposite ends of the political spectrum based on the
relative importance each assigns to just six values. The book explains why we
embrace certain ideologies better than any other I've read. . . .


[ED NOTE: Pinker, Kahneman, and Haidt on EDGE:
Steven Pinker: "A History of Violence" EDGE Master Class 2011
http://is.gd/LKqMzj
Daniel Kahneman: "A Short Course In Thinking About Thinking" EDGE Master Class
2007 http://is.gd/WRUYVw
Jonathan Haidt EDGE Seminar "A New Science of Morality" http://is.gd/piu6w8]

---------------------------------------------------
FOLHA DE S.PAULO
Beauty and Science
June 6, 2013
By Hélio Schwartsman

Every year, the Edge.org website, run by a group of scientists and intellectuals
in the U.S., presents a provocative question the responses to which  are then
collected in a book that is invariably instructive and surprising, since the
contributions are heavyweights from various fields of academia and the world of
the arts. "What is your favorite explanation is that deep, elegant or
beautiful?" was the question proposed in 2012. Almost 200 responses are
collected in the volume This Explains Everything, launched earlier this year.

One of the texts that particularly caught my attention is the novelist and
philosopher Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, she remembers that there is in
principle no connection between the fact that a theory is beautiful and it is
true, and yet we tend to use aesthetic criterion for deciding between competing
explanations. ...

----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
Edge Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private operating foundation under
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

"The World's Smartest Website … EDGE is a salon for the world's finest minds."
THE GUARDIAN

"We'd certainly be better off if everyone sampled the fabulous EDGE symposium
which, like the best in science, is modest and daring at once." David Brooks,
NEW YORK TIMES (OpEd)

"An epicenter of bleeding-edge insight across science, technology and beyond,
hosting conversations with some of our era's greatest thinkers." THE ATLANTIC

More about EDGE: http://edge.org/edge-in-the-news
----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
EDGE.ORG

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Nina Stegeman, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2013 by Edge Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by Edge Foundation, Inc.
260 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10001

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Online Reader - Project Gutenberg

Online Reader - Project Gutenberg  Want some free books, they may not be what you are looking for but, this project is worthwhile and it costs nothing to try and read them ...

Friday, June 7, 2013

Explore. Dream. Discover. if you live near Palm Springs...

Explore. Dream. Discover.   see what is happening...

Ancient Subatomic Signature Discovered Spanning the Universe (A 'Galaxy' Most Popular)

Ancient Subatomic Signature Discovered Spanning the Universe (A 'Galaxy' Most Popular)

CARMEN CAVALLARO - ADIOS

Carmen Cavallaro  was pouring out of our radio in the days before TV, Mom and Dad loved this kind of music, and because of them ...so do I.

Sunrise Serenade By Los Indios Tabajaras

 you know I am coming to the end when I get to my beautiful guitars found in the forest....in the magic of a Brazilian forest this wonderful music....imagination...!!!

The Doors- Light My Fire

there is a similarity here....maybe that is why Jose decided to record the song....it was right for Jose...and right for The Doors...Wow...what music...

Jose Feliciano - The Thrill is Gone

Getting ready to call it a day...love this

Matthew, Gunnar, and Sam Nelson "Garden Party"

 A great presentation by the young Nelson's

Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis Jr. - You don't have to be a star 1977

Lets have a touch of disco...

Ricky Nelson - Garden Party

Ah!  Ricky....this was a favorite, another worn out record....loved , loved Ricky

Guy Mitchell - Singing The Blues

you can't lose listening to an upbeat....you don't have to cry with this....my record wore out, as I danced and vacuumed around the house.

Betty Clooney - A Guy Is A Guy

Bet you didn't know that Rosemary Clooney had a sister with a great voice too!

Artie Shaw and Tony Pastor, Jeepers Creepers.wmv

 I published this before and I thought that Tony Pastor was an early Tony Bennet....wrong!  The voice you just heard on Indian Love Call was Tony Pastor with Artie Shaw.

Artie Shaw - Indian Love Call

OOPS got off the subject...here is Mr Great...loved his sound...

Jose Feliciano & Johnny Cash

This ole country gal, really loves Jose Feliciano, and it just goes to show that everything blends together...what if we said Johnny Cash made too much money so he can't appear with Jose Feliciano, we have to even it out?  Hmmmm?

INDIAN LOVE CALL ~ Slim Whitman 1951 .wmv

Here is yodeling... in song...and I love it...just an old country gal.... (Mars Attacks....Slim Whitman made the Martian heads explode?)  Is that right?

Frank Ifield - I remember you (1962)

Now you know there is lots of country in my song loving memory....This was the version of the song I loved.

Jo Stafford (playlist)

This is a great song, and ready to be heard again....one of my favorites..I even like the yodel version I published before, will try and find again.

Jo Stafford - Something To Remember You By

 Jo Stafford makes it even more romantic, but I do love both versions, Vera Lynn and Jo Stafford.

Vera Lynn - Something To Remember You By - 1931

 A wonderful voice that kept the British Troops hopeful, and she transferred to our troops and to our shore, we loved her too...

John Pizzarelli - Something to remember you by

Just a little Pizzarelli today...

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Who Owns the Future?: Jaron Lanier: 9781451654967: Amazon.com: Books

Who Owns the Future?: Jaron Lanier: 9781451654967: Amazon.com: Books  I am still thinking about this, it is causing me lots of thought....and as fate happens.... this morning I picked up an edition of +Shift which I loved and saved. the first article I read again, now had more meaning.  Why Science Needs Art  because my argument is that the arts give us another view, which we need before we continue to trample and destroy everything we have built up...(That is my personal opinion, what appears not only in my world, but in the world of many who grew up in what we consider a different United States) The article is in the September-November edition 2008   What a wonderful, thoughtful magazine, sorely missed.

Proust Was a Neuroscientist: Jonah Lehrer: 9780547085906: Amazon.com: Books    I read this book about a year or two, ago.  It in no way is trying to state that artists discover science before scientists, as the first review on Amazon seems to indicate,( from my point of view), but then we non- scientists, bounce all over the place...What do we know?

 Rather, it is a different thinking that is put forth, a romantic, or wandering intellect that sees beyond its nose, beyond everyday events and dreams into the future,  Maybe it is our way of coming on new discoveries, they are prime to be found, so the simple act of observation, or a creation that pours from an artist, are the prime that brings the well water to the surface.

I thought I had reviewed Proust on Amazon, but have not found the review... I would have read it from a different perspective then, because I had an awakening when I listenedd to Jaron on Book TV... that the goal he maintains is blinding him ( again a personal observation)... it is an admirable goal...the goal to even out the distribution of money in society...

However, I still think we need to do the algorithm on people, their differences, their ability what they love about living and creating, and the group that does not want to contribute, and then those that are unable to contribute......before we think about evening out the distribution of money, then we will have a starting point, but not until we solve the problem of the "makers of chaos"

Its deep thinking, lots of things we do are determined by what we think will happen, no one sees the future, then bam!  We created a new chaos...!!

What do you think...?  Lets unite +Jaron Lanier with +Jonah Lehrer...and see where those marvelous minds will take us?  Please let me be the first to know about the excitment ...







Barry White - Ain't No Sunshine When She's Gone

Had to do Barry White , too!  Was sitting in a restaurant 2 weeks ago and this wonderful voice placed an order next to me....I thought Barry White had come back....and said so....in fact other patrons spoke up and agreed with me.
A wonderful voice....

Joe Cocker - Ain't No Sunshine

just had to give you a little of Joe Cocker in comparison...nice husky type voice...is he still recording?

Jose Feliciano - Ain't No Sunshine

Comin backkkkkk....just love Jose Feliciano, is he bringing out any new albums?

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Carousel Theatre | Led Zeppelin - Official Website

Carousel Theatre | Led Zeppelin - Official Website   A long long time ago, this entertainment center brought thousands of people to Framingham.  Ken's Steak House was humming with business, and so was the Monticello, across Rt 9, everyone benefited. 

Jimmy Buffet - George Straight - Alan Jackson - "Hey Good looking"

Oh, my Gosh!     LISTEN TO THIS....its the best!  Wow! How lucky can we get to have them all together....and they are Cookin!

Hank Williams - Hey Good Lookin' (with lyrics)

This was the beginning of country crossing over to mainstream....we loved it.....as you can see in my previous post.

kitty kallen - hey good lookin'

The Wellworth in Framingham blasted this on the jukeboxes, as we wanted to jump up and Jitterbug,   out on the main drag, the cars would parade through town, like they did in all the small towns in America.

Kitty Kallen - If I Give My Heart to You (1959)

Of all the recordings of this song, this was my favorite....and it is ripe for another come back...bet you never heard this before either...(unless you are my age...!)

Joni James sings "How Important Can It Be?"

Her voice suits this song so well, and this is a song that lingers with you....what do you think.....?

Joni James - Why Don't You Believe Me

This is another song, waiting to be rediscovered.  Joni James, had a beautiful voice and ...of course we played her records over and over.....then over again....can you see why?  If it was a knock down success once, it has to resonate again!  Wonderful sounds to calm the world down with love and romance again....

BILLY ECKSTINE (playlist) a nice selection, and many can be purchased on one album

I am sure I chose this before, but...I could not find, I'm Your's....so I substituted this so you could hear the tone of his voice and imagine his singing, I'm Yours..  the tone of voice is very important to the success of the song.  The deeper voice makes it sexier...but that is just my opinion, what do you think....??

Eddie Fisher - I'm Yours

 My bet is this song will be a hit again....I'd like to hear a Billy Eckstine sounding voice do it...a little more depth than Eddie....but this is not to say that we did not love this song, by Eddie Fisher....it was wonderful...I thought Billy Eckstine did it too....that is why his voice is with me on this recording...

Math and Science (playlist) and Jaron Lanier, Who Owns the Future

just thinking again about chaos and + Jaron Lanier and his new book, Who Owns the Future.    I am sure  you know I am not a scientist or I would not think this way.  It occurs to me that algorithms can not control chaos, nor can we, as the frequent swings in the market and the economy show us... I listen to incredibly beautiful music...which comes from chaos ....so why are we trying to change nature?  Chaos is beautiful, is part of nature, it is what makes the world tick, the cycles of nature are chaotic...warm and cold periods in our climate thru the centuries, the glory of the birthing of icebergs, the Artic summer, the Northern Lights, sunspots and more.. Maybe the algorithms can't control chaos, but the music chaos produces might be the answer to why we should let it be, and learn to live with it, rather than to try and change it, maybe the music of chaos will help us understand chaos better..?.
 
How can we live with chaos and even out society which seems to be the goal that is causing us to try to change the mechanism of the world, according to Jaron Lanier on Book TV?   Wow! that is a powerful statement....Maybe we have to rethink our goal? Jaron has the ability to think positive...he is a wonderful thinker, hope I can get him off the negative approach of restrains and to the positive approach....with my ramblings...

Can we ever even out society that is full of chaos, with people of varying skills and thought processes etc.? Should we do an algorithm first to level off the chaos between each individual in the world before we try and control the algorithms of the chaos they produce?  I think so...this elephant might not go down!

  Has anyone figured out how much we have accomplished in the 100 years we have been in the Age of OIL?  That too is a powerful statement....what has the Age of OIL made possible for mankind? Would mankind be better served if we let chaos lead us to the future, as it has done through out history?  Just think of the strides we have made to even out society in our country, with the advent of the Age of Oil, in such a short time.  My Dad , one little everyman example,  came to America as many immigrants did near the turn of the century, from a one or two room home with 4-5 or more people ,  no electricity, no central heat, no personal transportation,  just a goat that helped them earn a living,when he sold it's milk door to door as a small boy.

In the America of 1916 when he touched our shores.......Oh !  how the world changed for my Dad and his family....just think about the instant improvement in lives, manufacturing was producing jobs, cars began to take the place of horses and carriages, medicine was improving and the Wow!.... opportunity to move into a home where you had a bedroom of your own!

  Chaos and competition.....stirred the oil industry....and as soon as the Baron of oil got too big, the government immediately began to think of ways to restrain him and in that instant he thought of ways to beat the competition and the government....read, The Prize...

Imagine how the Ark of the Covenant shocked and changed the battlegrounds of the past, when it shot out its magic (nuclear?) rays.  Many of us are aware  that there is a spontaneous combustion in the desert sand. Could this  have been the weapon in the Ark that killed everyone around it?  An invention of man that leveled the playing field, or did it control the playing field?  Doesn't competition level the playing field?

Think once more beyond trying to level the playing field thru conquering chaos, and imagine the business world, where we actually make it easier for the giants to survive and take more of the money.  How do we do it?...By making it harder through restrains, taxes,regulations, fees, applications, delays , hearings and all the stuff we pile on to a new business venture.  By the time the new business gets started it is behind the  8 ball.  Even existing businesses are regulated to death  or near death, so that jobs are constrained by the lack of ability of businesses to use their spare capital to grow.  The purpose of a business is to grow, just as humans grow, to expand, to make jobs, to create and satisfy the public with their needs....otherwise there is no point in having a business.

Chaos that is created in Washington is where the problem is....its time to evaluate all the rules and regulations, taxing strategies, and other constrains on ideas that create new businesses and competition.   Lets do some algorithms on restrains on business?  Whoopie, I hope someone that thinks algorithms is reading this....help this country....get out from under!

  Our country became great when men and women with ideas were allowed to develop them without these crushing restrains .  Each new business creates jobs, and each of us has an obligation to climb the ladder...doing so, we make room for those behind us.  This is how jobs are created . Happiness is having a job, a career, something to point to as a life of productive worth, restraining the winners, costs jobs, so compete with them!

For my humble opinion, I like to work toward the positive and not the negative.  More good things happen with that approach, rather than worrying about how much Facebook is earning, or how much Google is earning,and how we can spread the wealth by restraining them.     Let's open the doors to competition and watch the chaos evolve, LET IT HAPPEN!     Hmmm, maybe we will create jobs and magically the middle class will again improve as it did in the 50's. 

 My life with my hardworking immigrant Dad, was idyllic.  He even took two jobs so he would have the money to start his own business.  That is still what America is all about, but we are doing a good job of squashing it......We are killing the elephant !But then.....what do I know....its a confusing world!

Monday, June 3, 2013

Readers Catalog from the University of Chicago Press

Readers Catalog from the University of Chicago Press  Just another site for books that are not popular market books, rather for more serious readers...

Berkeley Lab Researchers Discover How and Where Breast Tumor Cells Become Dormant and What Causes Them to Become Metastatic « Berkeley Lab News Center

Berkeley Lab Researchers Discover How and Where Breast Tumor Cells Become Dormant and What Causes Them to Become Metastatic « Berkeley Lab News Center


Just a little chaos to lead us down the road to more discoveries on how to treat cancer....the chaotic threat!

Water, Consciousness & Intent: Dr. Masaru Emoto

Just a follow up to the sound of water....incredible isn't it?

Who knows how to kill an elephant? Who Owns the Future, a new book.....

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Who Owns the Future? by Jaron Lanier (May 7, 2013)

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