Reports about the atrocity carried out by U.S. Marines last November in Haditha appear to be accurate — and very late in coming, as Rep. John Murtha has stated quite bravely. I don’t believe in condemning all U.S. troops. But neither should this incident be viewed apart from the disastrous overall course of this war. We must face the possibility
A friend writes in about my dismissal of the 9/11 conspiracy film “Loose Change 9/11.” His comments deserve a reply: …the fact that your piece begins with “I haven’t seen either edition but…” takes some of the sting out of the argument that follows. Check out the video first and then let us know where you think the filmakers went
So to speak… From this article it appears that details of the courthouse shootings on May 17 are murkier than previously thought. There’s some question as to whether the shooter actually made a religious pronouncement before firing his gun. This piece reports that prime minister Erdogan and the AKP are blaming the attack on “a shadowy far-right group.” Of course
Try it, it works… John Cage (1912-1992), Early Piano Music (Herbert Henck, piano) (ECM New Series) Antony Pitts (b. 1969), Seven Letters and Other Sacred Choral Music (Hyperion) Thomas Tallis (c1505-1585), Gaude Gloriosa (Hyperion) Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643), The Sacred Music 3 (Hyperion) Trio Mediaeval, Stella Maris (ECM New Series) Guillaume de Machaut (c1300-1377), Messe de Notre Dame (Hyperion) Charles Koechlin
In a 1986 essay titled “Jazz Criticism and Its Effect on the Art Form,” Stanley Crouch described Lionel Richie as “a horse-faced Negro from the South… [who] pulls down millions for songs that contain so little melodic, harmonic and rhythmic character that even the most imaginative jazz musicians haven’t tried to use them as bridges to a larger audience in
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.