My live jazz intake has been unsteady the last few weeks, but it’s picking up again. Where have I been? Oh yes: –Pianist Aaron Goldberg had a CD release gig at the Jazz Standard on May 17. Worlds, his new outing on Sunnyside, has yet to arrive in the mail, but the sounds at the show were most promising. Few
My essay at Norm Geras’s weblog is now online. My subject: Turkish politics as portrayed in Orhan Pamuk’s novel Snow. Many thanks to Norm for the gracious invitation. For a complete list of Norm’s previous “Writer’s Choice” entries go here.
Behold one of the most innovative, technically gifted guitarists of the 20th century. I’ve been listening to him since I was a teenager. Last week he played at the Iridium in New York. I went there to worship, and I wasn’t surprised to run into some terrific musicians, including the guitarists Jonathan Kreisberg and David Gilmore and an Australian pianist
I’ve come across chatter about the second edition of a documentary called “Loose Change 9/11.” I haven’t seen either edition, but looks like a repackaging of some of the daft 9/11 conspiracy theories that were so forcefully challenged in this article in Popular Mechanics. Bill Weinberg also takes aim at the “conspiranoiacs” in this post. (Here’s a predictable rebuttal to
The other day I lamented John McCain’s between-the-lines apology to Jerry Falwell in the form of his commencement speech at Liberty University. People continue to fawn over McCain as a “uniter not a divider” and miss what seems to me to be the main point: McCain cloaked a naked electoral maneuver in some high-minded language about tolerance. One of the
Yeah, like that sentiment matters. Apparently General Michael Hayden is cruising toward confirmation by the Senate. Spencer Ackerman lays out why it shouldn’t happen ($ required, I think). There’s been justified talk that it’s inappropriate for a military man to head the CIA. What really began to baffle me was why Hayden insisted on facing the Senate committee in uniform.
A fundamentalist lawyer has killed a judge and wounded four others in Ankara. His motive was to protest the banning of headscarves. The judge’s funeral procession turned into a Kemalist (secular republican) display of anger, with people holding aloft pictures of Ataturk and venting against the ruling AKP party, which has vaguely Islamist roots. It’s a scenario practically lifted from
Creeping repression in regard to FBI anti-leak investigations. Journalists need defending, now more than ever.