#Trump #DonaldTrump #MarlaMaples #JeanCarroll #CaseOfMistakenIdentity
Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Sunday, January 5, 2020
The #QuixoticQuest and @TheHuOfficial
Here is the blog where I'm trying to organize my thoughts about this Quest
Trying to organize my thoughts
More recently I've been intrigued by the role of YouTube in this process. On YouTube, we see people all over the world singing American songs back to us. It's not always the same song, but it's a kind of international communication.
Now, just recently, some people out of Central Asia have been drawing my attention. One of these was #Dimash. I blogged about going to see him.
blog about Dimash concert
His coming here, only 2 years after going on a Chinese TV talent show, and nearly selling out the Barclay Center strikes me as a miracle. He's probably the best singer in history, but he's from Kazakhstan. It seems to me that fifty years ago the likelihood of a singer from Kazakhstan filling an arena in the USA would have been extremely low.
Well, I'm not sure whether Mongolia is considered central or east Asia, but there's a new group out of there as well, The HU. What they bring is a music style that I've never heard before that fuses traditional Mongolian instruments and throat singing with heavy metal influences. The result is the most intriguing and innovative rock band we've heard in a long time.
And what are they singing about? Genghis Khan....
And shortly after I discovered these intriguing videos I learned that they were touring the USA> They performed in Brooklyn, which isn't too far from me, but the time wasn't convenient, which was very frustrating to me. I did find some super cool interviews with these people. Now I'm not finding the interview that I liked best. Maybe I'll add it later, if I can find it again.
There's an interesting disconnect here, between what Genghis Khan means to people outside Mongolia and what that name means inside Mongolia.
Prior to encountering this group, my idea of Genghis Khan was that he was a terrifying imperialist, riding roughshod over most of Eurasia, bringing terror, rape, and pillage wherever he went. I didn't know much about him, really, just this negative impression.
Here, tho, this group is saying that people should return to the wisdom of Genghis Khan. Listening to this message was disturbing to me. These people have these beautiful instruments. They're out in this very spiritual looking desert. They're evoking images of this horrendous period of history -- and yet I'm listening, because the music is so intriguing and the videos are so good.
Obviously, I wasn't the only one intrigued, because, like Dimash, these people are touring the world, not too long after first becoming know on YouTube.
But, listening to them, I think I'm seeing the disconnect. For them, Genghis Khan was a spiritual leader who sought unification, world peace, religious tolerance, and even music.
This all happened a very long time ago, of course. I wasn't there. Were people terrified of the golden hoards merely because they were mysterious foreigners? Did they misinterpret the intentions of the "invaders?" Or, are these modern day Mongolians deluding themselves about their history?
In any case, these Mongolians *are* taking over the world musically, in a sense, traveling even farther than Genghis Khan to bring their music to the farthest corners -- and they want to bring peace and unity and religious tolerance. So, perhaps, it doesn't really matter so much what the historical Genghis Khan really was like. Perhaps it's more important what these intriguing images mean.
And, perhaps, The HU is going to help this Quixotic Quest.
BTW if you read my blogs, you should know that I edit them from time to time. If you come back later, it might not be exactly the same.
Wednesday, May 29, 2019
@joshgroban leaving Twitter -- again
Monday, March 18, 2019
allegations against MJ
So many of my friends have jumped on the "Leaving Neverland" bandwagon. They think MJ was a child molester.
I can't say for certain that he wasn't. I wasn't there.
On the other hand, I've seen so many bizarre lies made up about him, like that his children were fathered by his dermatologist or a white actor -- and that they're white, when: they're clearly light-skinned African Americans, Prince has inherited MJ's vitiligo, and Paris looks like MJ's twin.
Moreover, in my own family, I've seen that my ex had false memories of abuse, possibly implanted by a therapist, which seems to me likely to have happened to these two guys, if they weren't outright lying. I've seen transcripts of psychologists suggesting to former child friends of MJ that merely sleeping in his bed was sexual molestation.
In fact, he grew up, until he was 10 in a 2 bedroom home with 8 siblings and two parents. He had 26 cousins nearby. He would have had a very different concept of sharing sleeping quarters than most Americans. He saw nothing wrong with what he was doing and couldn't understand what everyone else thought was wrong with it.
I do suspect that he had an autism spectrum disorder. He didn't understand what kind of impression he was creating.
But I've based this whole Quixotic Quest on MJ's idea that singing together could bring or at least promote world peace. With so many people believing that MJ was a child molester, it's hard to continue this #QuixoticQuest without completely re-writing all my blogs about it.
I really thought that this was a divinely inspired calling, but I'm not sure where to go with it.
Of course, over time, my feeling about how this quest should work has evolved. I used to think it had to be a single song, sung all at the same time. Now I'm thinking that the way YouTube works, with so many people exchanging music, might be a better model. I also think that, perhaps, just having common cultural observances of any kind could be useful to help us feel like one people.
But, ultimately, the idea that this quest was inspired by MJ isn't going to be an easy sell right about now.
My recent YouTube video about this topic.
My main #QuixoticQuest blog
https://skysong263.blogspot.com/2015/05/trying-to-organize-information-about-my.html
Thursday, September 14, 2017
sleep remedies
link to original twitlonger
http://www.twitlonger.com/show/hp84rd
I don't use progesterone any more, btw, because I got ovarian cancer and my doctors feel that this hormone might encourage tumor growth
11) Caltrate + Minerals (else I get muscle tension & joint pain)
12) God Box (If anything is bothering me, or on my to do list, I write it down & put it in the box for God to take care of overnight. It's sort of like what Dumbledore did in Harry Potter, where he pulled extra thoughts out of his head with his wand and put them in the pensieve)
(BTW -- my progesterone container says some men also need progesterone supplements in order to sleep. My experience is that without it I get racing thoughts that keep me awake.)
Yesterday's post repeated:
What I have to do to go to sleep
1- prilosec for GERD
2 - melatonin
3 - progesterone
4 - pillows between my elbows & knees
5 - wrist braces
6 - mouthguard
7 - yoga before bed
8 - journal before bed
9 - bedtime prayer
10 - hemi-sync (Sleep with CD player)
Without any of these things, I can't sleep. With them, I'm fine.…
Friday, July 21, 2017
Editing wikipedia article about @theloosh
I'm not sure why this thing is getting right and left justified. I have it set for only right justify
== Other career milestones ==
I'm putting this here, rather than on the main page, because I'm so sick of self-righteous editors deleting my stuff. Frankly, I think editors are destroying wikipedia by making it too hard for ordinary people to post. I'll let someone else deal with the co-dependent drama. But there is a whole lot more to her career than what is on the main page
For instance, I see that the over-zealous editor has deleted the reference to the solo performances with Ian Anderson, because the point was surrounded by other language the editor didn't like -- effectively throwing the baby out with the bath water. Here are two youtube videos from January of 2006 of their appearance in Vienna https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTVuFKozfJg https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttGl-Mt302Y
While the main page refers to her tours with Josh Groban it neglects to mention that she appears as a soloist and concert mistress in two of Josh Groban's DVDs: "Live at the Greek" and "Awake." This music was characterized as classical/pop crossover. Her solos, "Kashmir" and "Bohemian Rhapsody," also appear on YouTube.
Again, while the main page refers to her touring with Chris Botti, it doesn't mention that she also appears as a soloist on Chris Botti's DVD and CD from his "In Boston" concert playing "Emmanuel." This is on youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8NN4fpdm40
She appears prominently on a DVD/CD called "Love Project Journey,: organized by a percussionist called Yael. This DVD/CD features improvisational/experimental music. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1523352/fullcredits?ref_=tt_ov_st_sm
Here is a youtube video of her playing with Josh Groban and David Foster on "Mi Mancherai" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJwNS-FPXOI
She did a duet of "Kashmir" with William Joseph on his CD "Beyond." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1hsAtAOGcs https://www.pandora.com/artist/william-joseph/beyond/kashmir-feat-lucia-micarelli-violin/TRx2jgz3ndrnmbK
She had a single "One More Cup of Coffee" on a fundraising CD Set for Amnesty International called "Chimes of Freedom" along with Steve Earle. On this single she both plays the violin and sings, revealing a bluesy singing style. https://music.amnestyusa.org/products/steve-earle-and-lucia-micarelli-one-more-cup-of-coffee-valley-below
She can be heard in several pieces on the CD's coming out of the Treme show. These include "I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance," "New Orleans Blues," "Heavy Henry," "Spring Can Really Hang You Up," and "Carved in Stone." These songs are in the New Orleans Jazz genre.
She toured with Chris Botti again, more recently, including in the 2015-2016 season. During these performances she was featured soloist on several pieces. I counted 5 or 6. http://www.bluenote.net/newyork/schedule/moreinfo.cgi?id=13655
She had a PBS special filmed June 3, 2017 https://events.kcrw.com/events/an-evening-with-lucia-micarelli-filmed-live-for-pbs/
The music of the Trans-siberian orchestra has been characterized as symphonic metal.
Also, she studied with Pinchas Zukerman, a very notable violinist, in the classical genre.
The variety of genres that she has undertaken is notable.
I believe that the emotional style and the unique sound of her playing are also notable -- even though the editor doesn't like to hear about it. Josh Groban recently tweeted that no one sounds like her https://twitter.com/joshgroban/status/870506744446832641 If you watch videos of her playing, you can see that what she is doing with the bow is not what other violinists do. It's hard to put these things into words, but presumably some future scholar, studying her work, will be able to explain why she is able to make the violin sound like other instruments, such as electric guitar (Kashmir) and tenor sax (Heavy Henry). It's hard to verbalize these things before the academic vocabulary characterizing her work is developed by scholars. There is a huge bias in wikipedia in favor of academic language developed by scholars, which results in ordinary people who try to describe this stuff in conversational English getting censored.
Another notable thing about her is her history of performing barefoot, which is visible on all of the DVD performances -- and some of the youtube videos listed above.
== personal life ==
She has been married https://twitter.com/theloosh/status/451945873573183488 https://www.instagram.com/p/mWvDamn18R/ Though I heard she may have gotten divorced
Thursday, June 1, 2017
What do I believe?
- The true name of God is unpronounceable. No human names for God are correct or incorrect.
- The religious/spiritual experience is universal, but non-verbal. The use of words to describe this experience leads to conflict.
- The true nature of God is not understandable. No human scriptures or religious texts are correct or incorrect.
- No person or group of people has a monopoly on the truth about God.
- Asking the question “Do You Believe in God?” is non-sensical, because whether one believes or not depends on how the word “God” is defined, but the word cannot be defined, because human language is insufficient.
- The confidence of particular individuals in the truth of their own scriptures or their own interpretation of scriptures relates to their particular personality, but not to the accuracy of their interpretation or scriptures.
- People who push their religious beliefs on others are insecure and need others to validate them. Often they are bullies. Often they are crazy. I was nearly attacked by a street preacher when the guy I was walking with decided to talk to the preacher about what the preacher was saying.
- conscientious objection to war and military service.
- sanctity of the environment as God’s creation.
- sanctity of truth — and repulsion toward people who lie.
- wrongness of oppression of people based on gender, age, race, LGBTQIA, religion etc.
- Generally I like free speech and deplore efforts to suppress it.
- I am pro-choice. I do not believe that killing human embryos, prior to the appearance of human brain activity, is murder. Fetuses later in development are a bit more troubling to me, though it depends on the circumstances.
- some social justice: i.e. basic safety nets for everyone -- though I still accept that some would be richer than others, and I don't believe in government ownership of the means of production
- 12 step approach to self-improvement
The divine as unknowable. This is a core belief for me. Neither the divine nor the physical universe can be completely encompassed by human speech or thinking. What happens may seem illogical or harmful. This is due to our deficiency in thinking, not to the divine.
All names and descriptions are wrong. The divine is not impressed by any one wrong description over another. Logical inconsistencies between religious beliefs can also be explained by the unknowable nature of the divine.
The word God is a variable, like the letter x in Algebra. It represents the answers to unanswerable questions.
Trying to prove the existence of God is nonsensical. First, there is no consensus as to what the word “God” represents. Many people seek to prove or disprove the existence of God using a concept of God that they understand to be promulgated by some group — but that group lacks actual authority to define God and the person making the argument may not even understand what that group actually believes. Second, the nature of logic is to reason from assumptions to conclusions. Logic can show that certain assumptions are inconsistent with each other, but the assumptions are taken on faith. Trying to prove an assumption is stating right up front that you lack faith in that assumption. If you say you are going to prove the existence of God, that means that you do not have faith in God.
Sense of contact: Many people have a sense of contact. I think some people call this a “personal relationship” with God. What is this? Is it actual contact with an external divine being or an interesting neurological phenomenon? People sometimes seem to be inspired by their sense of contact to speak words or take action. Often these words or actions lead to conflict. I’m not sure if that’s good or bad. I do like meditation, yoga and Zen koƤns, tho.
Life after death: I’m not particularly attracted to this concept. However, I believe, from physics that time is a dimension. Things that existed in the past are not gone. They are just located in a particular section of time that is not currently accessible to us. That does not mean that it will never be accessible to us. Moreover that does not mean that some divine entity cannot freely travel back there and visit what exists in that other place. I don’t really believe that people are dead.
I sometimes quote from religious texts or traditions because they seem to coincide with what I feel. This is due to my literary upbringing. I do not accord any religious text a sacred weight. Each text is the best effort of the authors to express their understanding. Each text is wrong, but also has elements of rightness — elements that genuinely reflect a historical divine inspiration. Each text must be interpreted within a historical context. It cannot be applied in a simple minded fashion to current events.
I get annoyed by detailed systems of signs, numbers, symbols, or diet that purport to be religious or spiritual.
The concept of free will is not attractive to me. I believe that most of what goes on in the brain is in the subconscious, based on what I’ve read of reports of scientific literature. The conscious brain is a delusional egomaniac that thinks it is in charge, when it is the tail thinking it is wagging the dog.