Author Archives: Michael-Patrick Harrington

This Week’s Turntable…

 

  1. …and Then You Shoot Your Cousin by the Roots (2014)
  2. Unplugged 1991 & 2001: The Complete Sessions by R.E.M. (2 CDs; 2014)
  3. Turn Blue by the Black Keys (2014)
  4. St. Vincent by St. Vincent (2014)
  5. Sign O’the Times by Prince (2CD; 1987)
  6. Innvervisions by Stevie Wonder (1973)
  7. Weezer (The Green Album) by Weezer (2001)
  8. Breath from Another by Esthero (1998)
  9. Ultra Payload by Perry Farrell’s Satellite Party (2007)
  10. 101 by Depeche Mode (2 CDs; 19889)

What are you listening to?

 

 

Weezer, “Hash Pipe”

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xnycl_weezer-hashpipe_music

 

Stevie Wonder, “Higher Ground” {live}

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnbdXWvmysg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This Week’s Turntable…

 

  1. Turn Blue by the Black Keys (2014)
  2. Le Tigre by Le Tigre (1999)
  3. Banga by Patti Smith (2012)
  4. Nashville Skyline by Bob Dylan (1969)
  5. Atom Heart Mother by Pink Floyd (1970)
  6. Handwritten by the Gaslight Anthem (2012)
  7. Ghost EP by Sky Ferreira (2012)
  8. Madman Across the Water by Elton John (1971)
  9. Indie Cindy by the Pixies (2014)
  10. 20,000 Watt R.S.L. by Midnight Oil {compilation} (1997)

What are you listening to?

 

Midnight Oil, “Blue Sky Mine”

 

 

Le Tigre, “Deceptacon” {live}

 

 

 

 

 

This Week’s Turntable (Well, Really Last Week’s Turntable)…

  1. 13 Songs by Fugazi {2 EPs on 1 CD} (1989)
  2. Hard Candy by Counting Crows (2002)
  3. Timespace: The Best of Stevie Nicks by Stevie Nicks {compilation} (1991)
  4. Indie Cindy by the Pixies (2014)
  5. Help! By the Beatles (1965)
  6. Challenders by the New Pornographers (2007)
  7. Handwritten by Gaslight Anthem (2012)
  8. Flowers by the Rolling Stones {Russian “edition” w/ 10 bonus tracks} (1967)
  9. Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap AC/DC (1976)
  10. The Who Sings My Generation by the Who (UK 1965 as My Generation/US 1966)

What are you listening to?

 

Counting Crows, “American Girls”

 

Stevie Nicks with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around”

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ahwj_tom-petty-stevie-nicks-stop-draggin_music

 

Happy 103rd birthday, Robert Johnson…

Happy 103rd birthday to Robert Johnson, quite possibly the greatest influence on popular music, although he only recorded 29 songs before his untimely death. He was considered a wannabe by senior Delta blues figures like Son House, so Johnson went to the crossroads near Dockery Plantation at midnight and sold his soul to the devil. When he returned, his contemporaries’ jaws dropped. No one had ever heard a guitar played like that, and his voice was haunted, as if he was fully aware of the terrors nipping at his heels. When you listen to his recordings, it sounds like two people playing guitars, but it’s just Robert, alone in the studio. (Overdubbing didn’t exist yet.) One can only imagine what the future would have held for him musically The devil, however, called in his marker early.

One could make the argument that without Johnson, Elvis would never have walked into Sun Records in 1953. (Sun Records might not have existed either, since they started out recording blues musicians like Howlin’ Wolf, who were heavily influenced by Johnson.)

robert johnson

This Week’s Turntable…

 

  1. American Beauty by Bruce Springsteen (limited edition vinyl EP released for Record Store Day)
  2. Swan Lake: The Essential Highlights composed by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky; performed by the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House (1989)
  3. Live Seeds by Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds (1993)
  4. Blondie by Blondie (1976)
  5. Teeth Dreams by the Hold Steady (2014)
  6. St. Vincent by St. Vincent (2014)
  7. Greatest Hits Volume I & Volume II by Billy Joel {compilation} (2 CDs; 1985)
  8. Songs of Leonard Cohen by Leonard Cohen (1967)
  9. Handwritten by the Gaslight Anthem (2012)
  10. Rush soundtrack by Eric Clapton (1992)

What are you listening to?

 

 

“Spinners” (live) by the Hold Steady

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QHMsP4DkUA

 

 

“Tell Her About It” by Billy Joel

 

 

Scene from the film Black Swan, featuring Natalie Portman performing the White Swan; she won the Best Actress Oscar for her performance

 

 

Congratulations, Donna Tartt!

From The Daily Telegraphl

Pulitzer Prize: Donna Tartt wins in fiction for ‘The Goldfinch’
© The Daily Telegraph | 22 April, 2014 07:08
Last week Donna Tartt was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for her novel The Goldfinch. The prize honours exceptional journalism, literature and musical composition.

The 784-page bestseller, which follows a grieving 13-year-old New Yorker whose fate becomes intertwined with a mysterious 17th-century painting, was described as “a beautifully written coming-of-age novel that stimulates the mind and touches the heart” in a release from Columbia University, which announced the awards.

The Goldfinch triumphed over the two other nominees, The Son by Philip Meyer and The Woman Who Lost Her Soul by Bob Shacochis.

It was Tartt’s eagerly anticipated third novel, following her highly praised The Little Friend, which won the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2003. Tartt’s first book, The Secret History, was released in 1992.

A film adaptation of The Goldfinch is in the pipeline after the producers behind the hit teen franchise The Hunger Games announced last month that they had taken up an option on the book.

This year’s Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction went to Dan Fagin’s Toms River: A Story of Science and Salvation, the story of a small New Jersey town ravaged by industrial pollution. Megan Marshall’s Margaret Fuller: A New American Life won for biography, and the winner in poetry was 3 Sections by Vijay Seshadri.

Alan Taylor’s The Internal Enemy: Slavery and War in Virginia, 1772-1832 received the history prize.

Last year’s Pulitzer Prize for fiction was awarded to The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson.

 

This Week’s Turntable…

 

  1. American Beauty by Bruce Springsteen (limited edition vinyl EP released for Record Store Day)
  2. Do to the Beast by Afghan Whigs (2014)
  3. Time Capsule: The Best of Matthew Sweet 1990-2000 {compilation} by Matthew Sweet
  4. Easter by the Patti Smith Group (1978)
  5. Live in Boston by Fleetwood Mac (1 CD & 2 DVDs; 2004)
  6. Madman Across the Water by Elton John (1971)
  7. Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap by AC/DC (1978)
  8. The Complete Discography {compilation} by Minor Threat (1988)
  9. Faith by George Michael (1987)
  10. Double Platinum {compilation} by Kiss (1978)

What are you listening to?

 

Bruce Springsteen & the E Straat Band with Tom Morello, “American Beauty”

 

George Michael, “Faith”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lu3VTngm1F0

 

This Week’s Turntable…

 

  1. Do to the Beast by Afghan Whigs (2014)
  2. Teeth Dreams by the Hold Steady (2014)
  3. Time Capsule: The Best of Matthew Sweet 1990-2000 {compilation} by Matthew Sweet
  4. At Folsom Prison by Johnny Cash (1968)
  5. The Blind Leading the Naked by Violent Femmes (1986)
  6. The Black Album by Prince (1987)
  7. Long May You Run by the Stills-Young Band (1976)
  8. The Very Best of the Meters by the Meters {compilation} (1997)
  9. Out of Body by the Hooters (1993)
  10. It’s Five O’clock Somewhere by Slash’s Snakepit (1995)

What are you listening to?

 

 

Matthew Sweet, “Girlfriend”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9aWPTCc2r0

 

The Afghan Whigs, “Algiers”

 

 

Blood Moon

I have to try to see this…unfortunately the totality happens at 3am…might be worth it…

Blood_Moon__23067_zoom

From the Epoch Times:

‘Blood Moon:’ Red or Orange ‘Pink Full Moon’ and Lunar Eclipse (Tetrad) Takes Place April 15

By Zachary Stieber, Epoch Times | April 13, 2014

The moon is seen taking different orange tones during a lunar eclipse over Mexico City, Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2007. The event was widely visible from the United States and Canada as well as South America, the Pacific Ocean, western Asia and Australia. During a total lunar eclipse, the moon’s disk can take on a colorful appearance from bright orange to blood red to dark brown and, rarely, very dark gray.

The moon is seen taking different orange tones during a lunar eclipse over Mexico City, Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2007. The event was widely visible from the United States and Canada as well as South America, the Pacific Ocean, western Asia and Australia. During a total lunar eclipse, the moon’s disk can take on a colorful appearance from bright orange to blood red to dark brown and, rarely, very dark gray.

The “Blood Moon,” or a moon that can turn red or orange, is slated for April 15–along with a lunar eclipse.

The rare sight from Earth is attracting a lot of attention, partly because it’s the first major celestial phenomenon since early January.

It’s also the beginning of “an extraordinary series of lunar eclipses,” according to the United States space agency, NASA.

That series is four consecutive total eclipses occurring at approximately six month intervals.

After the one on April 15, another will follow on October 8 of this year.

The third is slated for April 4, 2015; and the fourth September 28, 2015.

The moon turns red on June 15, 2011, as seen from Nairobi, Kenya.

This series is referred to by experts as a lunar eclipse tetrad.

“The most unique thing about the 2014-2015 tetrad is that all of them are visible for all or parts of the USA,” said longtime NASA eclipse expert Fred Espenak in a post on the agency’s website.

Usually, about two lunar eclipses happen per year, but not all of them are total. Some are barely visible while others are partial eclipses.

The eclipse on April 15 will begin at 2 a.m. EDT when the edge of the Moon first enters the amber core of Earth’s shadow. Totality occurs during a 78 minute interval beginning around 3 a.m. in the morning on the east coast (midnight on the west coast).

Weather permitting, the red Moon will be easy to see across the entirety of North America.

Why Does the Moon Turn Red?

NASA explains why the moon will likely turn red:

“A quick trip to the Moon provides the answer: Imagine yourself standing on a dusty lunar plain looking up at the sky. Overhead hangs Earth, nightside down, completely hiding the sun behind it. The eclipse is underway.

“You might expect Earth seen in this way to be utterly dark, but it’s not. The rim of the planet is on fire! As you scan your eye around Earth’s circumference, you’re seeing every sunrise and every sunset in the world, all of them, all at once. This incredible light beams into the heart of Earth’s shadow, filling it with a coppery glow and transforming the Moon into a great red orb.”

The name “Blood Moon” isn’t usually identified as an official astronomical term; it comes from hunters who tracked and killed their prey by autumn moonlight, stockpiling food for the winter ahead. “You can picture them: silent figures padding through the forest, the moon overhead, pale as a corpse, its cold light betraying the creatures of the wood,” according to NASA.

Some people, such as John Hagee, pastor of a church and author of “Four Blood Moons: Something is About to Change,” say that the tetrad holds religious significance, particularly because the first two blood moons align with the Passover and the Feast of Tabernacle. Hagee told Fox News that the tetrad signals the end of the modern era.

“Technically, the end times began with the outpouring of Pentecost 2,000 years ago,” said Hagee. “We have been in the end times a long time.”

Hagee is credited for popularizing using the term Blood Moon to refer to the full moons in the lunar tetrad.

Pink Moon?

Another term that is used to refer to this full moon is the Full Pink Moon.

That doesn’t refer to the moon turning pink.

Instead, according to the Farmer’s Almanac, the first full moon in April is dubbed thus.

“This name came from the herb moss pink, or wild ground phlox, which is one of the earliest widespread flowers of the spring,” says the Almanac.

“Other names for this month’s celestial body include the Full Sprouting Grass Moon, the Egg Moon, and among coastal tribes the Full Fish Moon, because this was the time that the shad swam upstream to spawn.”

The name comes from Native Americans. It doesn’t mean the moon will be pink in color, but it refers to the color of the flowers.
Exploring Lunar Eclipse Tetrads

Over the past 5,000 years, 142 of these tetrads have occurred. Before the one that will happen this year and next year, the last one happened in 2003 and 2004.

During the present millennium, the first eclipse of every tetrad occurs sometime from February to July. In later millennia, the first eclipse date gradually falls later in the year because of change in the Earth’s orbit.

NASA explains that Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli first pointed out that the frequency of tetrads varies over time. For instance, there were no tetrads from 1582 to 1908, but from 1909 to 2156 there are 17.

The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada says that after the upcoming tetrad, the next one will take place in 2032 and 2033. The one after that is slated for 2043 and 2044.

All told, there are slated to be six tetrads through 2091, not including the upcoming tetrad.