Thanks, Jeff.
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Singing:
I wanna be with you when the nighttime comes
I wanna be with you when the daytime comes
I wanna be with you
I wanna be with you when the nighttime comes
I wanna be with you when the daytime comes
I wanna be with you
In New York City, when an unusual crowd surrounds an ordinary building with lights and cameras and noise, it's either a bomb threat or a movie set. The latter can be pretty cool. The former, not so much.
I was walking east on 36th Street, head down against the relentless cold, the wind tugging tears right from my eyes. It's always the left eye that betrays me first — whether from sadness or cold, the left eye is always the one that lets…
The Art of Sushi.
Warning: Saki may spurt out your nose.
Via WFMU's Beware of the Blog.
The BBC intends to broadcast every surviving Bach composition, beginning December 16 and ending on Christmas. Now that's special programming.
I do not listen to Christmas records. I just don't—a legacy of working in record stores over waaay too many holiday seasons. So, when I tell you that I can't stop listening to Dana Cunningham's Silent Night, you just have to believe that it's pretty special. It's quiet, ruminative, and deep—good sound, too.
"Complete with chasing, biting, grunting, and loads of heavy breathing." Sound familiar?
Physicist Matt Sellars and his research team at the Australian National University's Laser Physics Center have "frozen" laser light—slowing it from 670 million miles an hour to 670 miles an hour, and then stopping it altogether.
And there's video!