David Adler

3
Sep

Eye-raq, Eye-ran

Sarah Palin cannot pronounce the names of the countries she wants to fight. She uses the term “death tax” and claims to represent small-town America. She warns that al-Qaeda continues to threaten and that Obama is “worried someone won’t read them their rights” — an astonishing thing to say after this administration has rendered, tortured and killed prisoners it has

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3
Sep

Sarah Palin, extremist

It can’t go unremarked at Lerterland that vice presidential candidate — that is, potential President of the United States — Sarah Palin has her own preacher problem in Ed Kalnins, who has claimed that criticism of the president can get you sent to hell. (Let’s check in with him after Obama wins.) Palin herself believes that the war effort in

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3
Sep

The current PW

New in Philadelphia Weekly: a preview of Todd Sickafoose’s Sept. 4 show at the Philadelphia Art Alliance, and a review of Appearing Nightly by the Carla Bley Big Band.

3
Sep

Detroit-Philly PS

W. Kim Heron, the moderator of our Coltrane panel in Detroit, has a nice piece in the Metro Times about the Detroit-Philly connection.

2
Sep

Detroit-Philly Summit

I returned yesterday from the Detroit International Jazz Festival, billed this year as a “Detroit-Philly Summit,” with artist-in-residence Christian McBride (Philly bassist extraordinaire). My business there was to speak about John Coltrane with fellow panelists Ashley Kahn, Jimmy Heath, Benny Golson and local Detroit legend Faruq Z. Bey. It was a great time, though I was boxed into a pretty

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1
Sep

New at Democratiya

My review of Kabir Sehgal’s Jazzocracy: Jazz, Democracy, and the Creation of a New American Mythology (Better World Books) is now online in the Autumn 2008 edition of Democratiya.

1
Sep

Six Picks: September 2008

My monthly list of recommended CDs, as published in All About Jazz-New York, September 2008: Brinsk, A Hamster Speaks (Nowt) Eric Hofbauer & the Infrared Band, Myth Understanding (Creative Nation) Ahmad Jamal, It’s Magic (Birdology) Rosa Passos, Romance (Telarc) Martial Solal Trio, Longitude (Cam Jazz) Torben Waldorff, Afterburn (ArtistShare)

1
Sep

Israeli musicians bullied, not bowed

Many an unkind word has been said about the late scholar and radical Palestinian activist Edward Said, but at least he firmly believed in the necessity of cultural contacts between Arabs and Israelis, so much so that he co-founded (with Daniel Barenboim) the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, one of the most notable peace-oriented artistic endeavors ever to have come out of

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