Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Twelve Guitar Players Playing

1. Leo Kottke
Deep River Blues



2. Robert Cray
Anytime



3. John McLaughlin
Trancefusion
John McLaughlin & 4th Dimension



4. Bonnie Raitt
Pride and Joy



5. Tchavolo Schmitt
Jardin d' Hiver



6. Django Reinhardt
I'll See You In My Dreams



7. Jeff Beck
Cause We've Ended As lovers



8. Paco de Lucia
Palenque



9. Eric Johnson
Rain



10. George Harrison
Something



11. Mick Taylor
John Mayall
Oh Pretty Woman
with  Buddy Whittington



12. Pat Metheny
The Way Up (Opening)


Tuesday, December 24, 2013

John McLaughlin - Selected Music

Manopa
Remember Shakti with John McLaughlin



Trancefusion
John McLaughlin & 4th Dimension



Oh Come, Oh Come, Emmanuel
John McLaughlin


More at:
http://www.johnmclaughlin.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_McLaughlin_(musician)

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Andy Singer - Six Cartoons

End of America's love affair with the car

Rethinking consumer Capitalism







Sunday, December 8, 2013

Carol Ann Duffy - Three Poems



December

The year dwindles and glows
to December’s red jewel,
my birth month.

The sky blushes
and lays its cheek
on the sparkling fields.

Then dusk swaddles the cattle,
their silhouettes
simple as faith.

These nights are gifts,
our hands unwrapping the darkness
to see what we have.

The train rushes ecstatic,
to where you are,
my bright star.



Name 

When did your name
change from a proper noun
to a charm?

Its three vowels
like jewels
on the thread of my breath.

Its consonants
brushing my mouth
like a kiss.

I love your name.
I say it again and again
in this summer rain.

I see it,
discreet in the alphabet,
like a wish.

I pray it
into the night
till its letters are light.

I hear your name
rhyming, rhyming,
rhyming with everything.


Originally

We came from our own country in a red room
which fell through the fields, our mother singing
our father’s name to the turn of the wheels.
My brothers cried, one of them bawling Home,
Home, as the miles rushed back to the city,
the street, the house, the vacant rooms
where we didn’t live any more. I stared
at the eyes of a blind toy, holding its paw.

All childhood is an emigration. Some are slow,
leaving you standing, resigned, up an avenue
where no one you know stays. Others are sudden.
Your accent wrong. Corners, which seem familiar,
leading to unimagined, pebble­-dashed estates, big boys
eating worms and shouting words you don’t understand.
My parents’ anxiety stirred like a loose tooth
in my head. I want our own country, I said.

But then you forget, or don’t recall, or change,
and, seeing your brother swallow a slug, feel only
a skelf of shame. I remember my tongue
shedding its skin like a snake, my voice
in the classroom sounding just like the rest. Do I only think
I lost a river, culture, speech, sense of first space
and the right place? Now, Where do you come from?
strangers ask. Originally? And I hesitate.

More at:
http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/singlePoet.do?poetId=11468

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Cesaria Evora - The Barefoot Diva

Cesaria Evora

Home of Cesaria Evora - Mindelo, Sao Vicente, Cape Verde

Sodade
Live Paris at Le Grand Rex 2004


Historia De Un Amor


Yamore with Salif Keita


Angola
Live Paris 2001



More at:
http://www.cesaria-evora.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ces%C3%A1ria_%C3%89vora