Solid Gone

Solid Gone

I haven't written lately because my right hand has been in a cast from my fingertips to my elbow—rendering me, as a writer, essentially mute. Writing, thinking, and feeling are, for a writer, inextricably linked. How do I know what I think if I haven't written about it?

Kind of funny: Woody Allen calls for Roman Polanski to be freed. Bros into underage Ho's, I guess.

Roman, before you bone a 13 year old, check the local laws, eh?

I'm sure Roman would try to fall back on the "I didn't know any of those hundreds of preteen girls were underage" defense.

Yuck.

And Woody, thanks for signalling your continued lack of insight.

Remember that thread about someone's personal life clouding your opinion of an artist's work? Well, Woody creeps me out so bad I haven't been able to appreciate (or even watch) his movies since the Soon Yi molestation.

Ben Webster & Associates

Ben Webster & Associates

<I>Ben Webster and Associates</I> is one of the loveliest albums put out in the past couple years by Speakers Corner Records, the German-based audiophile reissue house. (Its LPs are distributed in the U.S. by Chad Kassem’s Acoustic Sounds.) Recorded in 1959 on the Verve label, it features Webster, Coleman Hawkins, and Budd Johnson on tenor saxophones; Roy Eldridge, trumpet; Ray Brown, bass; Jimmy Jones, piano; Leslie Spann, guitar; Jo Jones, drums.

Music in the Round #38 Recordings In The Round

Music in the Round #38 Recordings In The Round

We all recognize that the <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/features/374">Super Audio Compact Disc</A>, despite being an almost ideal format for high-resolution audio, has not replaced the "Red Book" CD. However, Sam Tellig's comments in the June and July issues of <I>Stereophile</I>, and Steve Guttenberg's "<A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/whatever_happened_to_51-channel_mu… We See It</A>" in July, unleashed e-mails urging me to champion multichannel sound (don't I do this already?) and smite the unbelievers (not a chance).

Music in the Round #38 Contacts

Music in the Round #38 Contacts

We all recognize that the <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/features/374">Super Audio Compact Disc</A>, despite being an almost ideal format for high-resolution audio, has not replaced the "Red Book" CD. However, Sam Tellig's comments in the June and July issues of <I>Stereophile</I>, and Steve Guttenberg's "<A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/whatever_happened_to_51-channel_mu… We See It</A>" in July, unleashed e-mails urging me to champion multichannel sound (don't I do this already?) and smite the unbelievers (not a chance).

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