Tom

In the Hall of the Mountain King

I have a wonderful ‘flash mob’ for you today. This is a fantastic performance of Edvard Grieg’s ‘In the Hall of the Mountain King’ which he originally wrote to accompany Ibsen’s play, ‘Peer Gynt’. It’s a wonderful play on the theme of the piece, performing it in a variety of different styles. Be sure to watch/listen to the end to hear the amazing chorus!

Posted by Tom in Music, opera

FRYDAYE

Image

Meanwhile…

Description: four academics in spacesuits reading books in a space colony.

Person: "Super academics, hurry, our mining facility on Centauri-12 is being destroyed by an alien species! "

Economic Academic: "Good god, that mining facility is worth billions in economic activity, we have to save it right away!"

Science Academic: "I've done some experiments and determined the aliens are vulnerable to high concentrations of heat."

Engineering Academic: "I've engineered a focused laser weapon based on your research."

Philosophy Academic: "I've determined that we have no moral right to kill the aliens!"

Science Academic: "What?!"

Philosophy Academic: "Well, we are colonizing and invading their home world to enrich ourselves. Actually it seems pretty obvious..."

Economics Academic, as all raise their hands: "Who votes to kick super philosopher out of the group?"

Philosophy Academic: "Would it help if i explained that a majority vote can still violate the intrinsic rights of a minority?"

Engineering Academic: "No. Get out or we will laser cannon your face!"

Happy Friday Dance!

Today is the birthday, in 1940, of Tony Jackson, bass and vocals for The Searchers. Here they are in 1964.

Posted by Tom in Humor, sixties and seventies

It’s the Third THURSDAY

Out for a drag…

More Pharma

Today is the birthday, in 1946, of Linda Ronstadt. She is now retired but was a marvelously versatile singer performing in rock, country, light opera and latin. She’s won numerous awards. Here’s one of her most popular songs.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies

Bastille WEDNESDAY

Bastille Day in Photos
Pin on humorous funnies

Better living through Big Pharma

On this day in 1973, the Everly Brothers break up in the middle of a performance as Phil smashes his guitar on the stage and walks off. Here they are in better days.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies

Beheld

Beheld - Kindle edition by Nesbit, TaraShea. Literature & Fiction Kindle  eBooks @ Amazon.com.

I recently finished reading ‘Beheld’ by TaraShea Nesbit. I enjoyed it and gained, perhaps, a slightly different perspective of our colonial roots.

They say that history is written by the winners and, to be sure, it is generally their perspective of events that are told and passed down. Some of us are familiar with the narrative ‘Of Plymouth Plantation’ that was written by William Bradford, governor of the colony. But, of course, the writer gets to choose which facts to include and which to bury. This book is about some of those that Bradford chose not to tell us.

In particular, we learn about Bradford’s first wife, Dorothy, who fell overboard from the Mayflower while it was docked in Cape Cod Bay and drowned. It does seem odd that Bradford doesn’t mention it at all and that her very existence seems to be ignored.

This book is not a mystery, however. Dorothy is the novel’s recurring point of interest, appearing in the thoughts and memories of one of the key narrators, Bradford’s second wife, Alice. Alice and Dorothy had been childhood friends and when Dorothy died, Bradford sent for Alice and married her.

This is a novel about power and how those who have it use power to subjugate those who do not. The story is told by women. While we hear, in alternating chapters, from several people, the only first-person narrations belong to women – Alice, Eleanor Billington and later, Dorothy herself. There is tension between the Puritan majority and the Anglicans, personified by Eleanor and her husband who were brought to the colony as indentured servants.

It’s also a novel about cruelty. The Puritans believe themselves to be superior and civilized but they deploy barbaric cruelty to maintain their superiority. There is cruelty and subjugation everywhere – the Puritans over the Anglicans, the colonists over the natives, the men over the women. It’s all told in a quiet and matter-of-fact way that makes it even more disquieting to read.

Nesbit is a good writer and the book is a fairly quick read. Give it a shot and think about what parts of history we are told and what parts are buried.

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature