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Category: art beat

Friday, October 31st

only rock ‘n’ roll

The Ex, “Every Sixth Is Cracked,” live (studio performance), Netherlands, 2014


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lagniappe

art beat

William Klein (1928-), Dance in Brooklyn, New York, 1955

klein_dance-660x462

Thursday, October 30th

No background. No foreground. Three lines, intertwining.

Dewey Redman (1931-2006), tenor saxphone; Malachi Favors (1927-2004), bass; Ed Blackwell (1929-1992), drums; “Paris? Oui!,” 1969

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art beat

Bruce Davidson (1933-), Duffy Circus, Ireland, 1967

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Wednesday, October 29th

basement jukebox

Solomon Burke (1940-2010), “Stupidity” (S. Burke), 1963


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art beat

Robert Frank (1924-)

robert_frank_11

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the beat goes on

Eighteen hundred posts—and counting.

Monday, October 27th

Need a lift?

Konono No. 1, “Makembe”
Live (enhanced footage), France (Festival St. Nazaire), 2009

 

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lagniappe

art beat: yesterday at the Art Institute of Chicago

Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890)
Fishing in Spring, the Pont de Clichy (Asnières), 1887

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Saturday, October 25th

only rock ‘n’ roll

Murmurs, live, Oakland, Calif., 2014


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lagniappe

art beat

Lee Friedlander (1934-)

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Thursday, October 23rd

never enough

Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827), String Quartet No. 14 (Op. 131, C-sharp minor; 1826); Takács Quartet, live


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musical thoughts

Opus 131 . . . is routinely described as Beethoven’s greatest achievement, even as the greatest work ever written. Stravinsky called it ‘perfect, inevitable, inalterable.’ It is a cosmic stream of consciousness in seven sharply contrasted movements, its free-associating structure giving the impression, in the best performances, of a collective improvisation. At the same time, it is underpinned by a developmental logic that surpasses in obsessiveness anything that came before. The first four notes of the otherworldly fugue with which the piece begins undergo continual permutations, some obvious and some subtle to the point of being conspiratorial. Whereas the Fifth Symphony hammers at its four-note motto in ways that any child can perceive, Opus 131 requires a lifetime of contemplation. (Schubert asked to hear it a few days before he died.)

—Alex Ross, “Deus Ex Musica,” New Yorker, 10/20/14

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lagniappe

art beat: yesterday at the Art Institute of Chicago

Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890), The Poet’s Garden, 1888

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Wednesday, October 22nd

more sounds from Louisiana

Follow Me Down: Portraits of Louisiana Prison Musicians (trailer), 2012

 

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Music from the Big House (excerpt), 2010

 

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art beat

Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004), Louisiana, 1947

cartier-bresson-web

Monday, October 20th

Why not start the week with a parade?

Divine Ladies Social Aid and Pleasure Club Parade (with Stooges Brass Band), New Orleans, 2009


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art beat

Lee Friedlander (1934-), Second Liners, New Orleans, 1961

Jazz_127

 

Friday, October 17th

sounds of Japan

Perfume, live, Tokyo, 2014


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art beat

Garry Winogrand (1928-1984), New York (Metropolitan Opera), c. 1951

winogrand_metropolitian-opera1951

*****

musical thoughts

No musical pleasure is “guilty.”

Thursday, October 16th

Like you’ve never heard him before.

James Tenney (1934-2006), Collage No. 1 (“Blue Suede”), 1961


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lagniappe

art beat

Robert Frank (1924-), Detroit, 1955

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