The trouble with Tasers, <I>CrunchGear</I> explains, is "there appears to be an aggressive effort by [Taser International] to silence critics and to control data and, on occasion, manipulate statistics with the intent of preserving an illusion of safety surrounding its products."
I spent an afternoon <A HREF="http://stereophile.com/musicrecordings/671/">interviewing</A> the Emerson Quartet when they released their epic Shostakovich cycle.They were delightful. They're dedicated musicians, of course, but also witty and welcoming—just good company.
<I>The Daily Mail</I> maps the world with cartograms: resizing the countries according to different measures. For example, did you know that Ugandans drink the most alcohol per adult?
Hola,
I was driving along, grooving to the smooth FM stylings of Chic's "Good Times" when it hit me that they have really sucky violins in that tune.
Well, that made me wonder:
Has there ever been a rock/soul/R&B tune that was BETTER for having violins in it?
I can't think of any.
Paul Simon's "Something So Right" is my most outstandingly egregious example of violins killing a tune. Right now.
Now, don't get me wrong, fiddle can be just fine...
"Come on Eileen" needs that fiddle. I'm talking violins.