The World Economy

Forgetting the politics for a moment the world is in FAR worse shape than our rapacious politicians want to let on, assuming they are smart enough to know the details. Iceland went broke as a nation in October. They had riots today. This bit about the UK is really spooky:


Quote:

Britain has foreign reserves of under $61bn dollars (

best place to snag vinyl in nyc

Not sure if this is the best forum to post this in, but hopefully it will generate some responses. My dad's b-day is coming up and I know that he's looking for some vinyl for his new music hall turntable. I know a couple places for indie/rock, but he's more interested in classical/jazz and I'd love to get him a few lps. Thoughts? Anyone doing new presses of classical these days?

Jim Hall & Bill Frisell

Jim Hall & Bill Frisell

<I>Hemispheres</I>, the new two-CD album by guitarists Jim Hall and Bill Frisell, is the year’s first jazz masterpiece, a work of spontaneous lyricism as glittering and joyful as anything either has recorded (and, given their histories, that’s saying a lot). Hall, who’s 78, and Frisell, who’s 57 and something of a protg, both have a tendency toward doodling when they’re not anchored by a rhythm section. But Disc One—10 tracks of barebones duets (including Milt Jackson’s “Bags’ Groove,” Bob Dylan’s “Masters of War,” Hall’s anthemic “Bimini,” and several pure improvs)—are loose-limbered and air tight, the two trading harmony and melody, then merging the strands to the point where it’s unclear who’s playing what but it meshes and sings all the same. Disc Two—10 more tracks, mainly standards (“I’ll Remember April,” “Chelsea Bridge,” “My Funny Valentine,” “In a Sentimental Mood”), the guitarists joined by Scott Colley on bass and Joey Baron on drums—is no less free-spirited. Colley and Baron, who have played as sideman to both as well as many others, aren’t the sort to lay down rhythmic law; they splash color and weave textures along the leaders’ sinuous lines.

Catharsis

Catharsis

How great was it to hear all the music at the inaugural. Maybe music and the arts will once again be valued in the country. Maybe someone else than right wing country singers can get a tune in edgewise.

The Inauguration

Well, the Coronation is over and The Anointed One gave a good speech and the markets are dropping like a Rock...The DOW is down 210 and might hit negative 300 before the day is over.

I wish the fellow luck as, with this Congress, he is going to need it.

Terrible, The Global Warming Pop Religion takes a hit

Gore Losing the War: 59% Don't Believe Man Is Warming the Planet

By Noel Sheppard (Bio | Archive)
January 19, 2009 - 13:28 ET

He won an Oscar and a Nobel Peace Prize, but a recent poll suggests the Global Warmingist-in-Chief Al Gore is losing his propaganda war to convince Americans carbon dioxide is destroying the planet.

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/noel-sheppa...-warming-planet

It's the Song I Hate

It's the Song I Hate

On Sonic Youth's 1992 album, <i>Dirty</i>, there is a song called "Youth Against Fascism," in which Thurston Moore lists a series of difficult political themes (racial violence, a poor economy, a lousy president, etc.) and follows each item with the refrain:

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