[Update: the real-time forum is over, obviously, but the summary is still online, and we are keeping the comments open. Feel free to weigh in as you wish.] I’m conducting a live discussion from the Columbia University symposium “Jazz in the Global Imagination” — you can log in from anywhere at jazzhouse.org, the website of the Jazz Journalists Association. The
The Burmese junta, once again, has begun shooting and arresting peaceful demonstrators. Sullivan has a remarkable roundup here. The Burmese people are being shot at with Chinese weaponry, and China continues to block condemnations at the UN Security Council. Although a Foreign Ministry spokesperson said this: China hopes that all parties in Myanmar [sic] exercise restraint and properly handle the
Another note about that Columbia jazz conference I mentioned. I’ll be anchoring a live interactive web discussion on the day of the conference, Sept. 29, 9am to 6pm EST, with an evening summation panel at 7:30pm. Login instructions will be available at jazzhouse.org, the website of the Jazz Journalists Association. Full details on the conference, “Jazz in the Global Imagination:
I had intended simply to note that I’ll be attending an international jazz journalism conference next week at Columbia University (details here). But I need to point out the sheer oddity of this event following on the heels of a highly controversial visit by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. I support Columbia’s decision to host Ahmadinejad, a Holocaust denier pledged to
There is a spectacular uprising underway in Burma (I refuse to call it Myanmar). Here’s to the courageous monks and the long-suffering Burmese democrats. May they meet with every success against the “golf-playing generals,” as Amitav Ghosh has called them.
My profile of the veteran Philly-based saxophonist Odean Pope, in the Sunday Arts section of today’s Inquirer.
Janeane Garofalo fancies herself politically informed, a critical thinker, but she certainly disproved it on last night’s edition of Real Time with Bill Maher. Aside from botching the French president’s name (“Sarkozky,” Maher’s mistake as well), the 9/11 conspiracy theory dabbler first offered a rousing defense of Maher’s satellite guest, former CIA creep-turned-author Michael Scheuer. Funny, since Scheuer is an
My first experience of the Philadelphia Orchestra, with Christoph Eschenbach conducting, could hardly have been better. Yesterday’s matinee included a rousing Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 1, followed by a lacerating, sweating, physical account of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring. I’ve enjoyed the NY Philharmonic over the years, but this seems to be one area where Philly has the edge. I have