LATEST ADDITIONS

Fred Kaplan  |  Oct 11, 2007  |  First Published: Oct 12, 2007  |  0 comments
I forgot to note Thelonious Monk’s 90th birthday on Oct. 10. Some advice for a lifetime: If you come across people who doubt his mastery as not only a composer but also a pianist, don’t trust their judgment on anything. Linked below, from the early-to-mid ‘60s, is an especially Monkish clip.
Fred Kaplan  |  Oct 11, 2007  |  1 comments
Martial Solal’s early set at the Village Vanguard tonight was as exuberant as expected. The ghost of Tatum was riding high, as the French pianist, celebrating his 80th birthday with only his third appearance in New York City in the past 44 years, mad-dashed through a dozen or so standards—including “Caravan,” “I Can’t Get Started,” “My Heart Belongs to Daddy,” even “Body & Soul”—in ways that no one has ever heard them, carving up the scores like a Cubist (more Braque than Picasso, with shards of Duchamp tossed in for wit), stretching and squeezing bars, yet somehow sustaining the tempo and the melody with tenuous but seamless aplomb. His music might be a mere virtuosic lark, were it not for his harmonies—brooding, bristling, caramel-rich chords, clusters of them, alternately embellishing, paring down, or playing against the conventional changes.
Wes Phillips  |  Oct 11, 2007  |  0 comments
New Scientist explains what it will feel like—from drowning to decapitation.
Wes Phillips  |  Oct 11, 2007  |  0 comments
In my opinion, Charles Rosen's The Classical Style contained some of the most cogent thinking on Mozart ever written, so when he calls Hermann Abert's W. A. Mozart "the best book on Mozart ever written," I listen.
Wes Phillips  |  Oct 11, 2007  |  0 comments
Murphy is the Dean of the Chess University of Dupont Circle.
Wes Phillips  |  Oct 10, 2007  |  0 comments
Steven Pinker on swearing.
Wes Phillips  |  Oct 10, 2007  |  1 comments
Tales of the X-15.
Ariel Bitran  |  Oct 10, 2007  |  9 comments

My congregation! Ladies and Gentlemen! I tell you, there is a Pod! Some heathens choose to ignore him and burn for all eternity in the depths of hell, while Air Supply plays a continual concert of doom. Others have seen the light, and they opt instead for superior listening experiences.

I say, for the hi-fi community, there is hope. When I came to Stereophile, the first assignment Mr. Mejias gave me was to assess how I, as a young person, felt about the world of hi-fi. When my official term of Summer Intern was over, I had nothing. Well, I had a lot of stuff in my head, but nothing that I was ready to post on the blog. There was so much pressure. What had I learned here at Stereophile?!?!

So much.

Wes Phillips  |  Oct 10, 2007  |  0 comments
They get more regular over time.
Um
Wes Phillips  |  Oct 10, 2007  |  0 comments
Slips, stumbles, and verbal blunders—an excerpt from Michael Erard's new book on slips of the tongue. Inspired by the Decider, by the way.

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