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Category: Music

By The Generalist Posted on September 19, 2019April 28, 2021

Dictator vs. rock music

Manuel Noriega was the CIA-funded dictator of Panama from 1983 to 1989. When the United States invaded Panama, they drove him out with The Clash’s cover of I Fought the Law.

Categories: 20th century history, Arts & recreation, History, Military, Music, North & Central America, Places, Politics & law
Ribs
By The Generalist Posted on August 17, 2019April 28, 2021

Jazz on bones

In the 1950s and 60s, foreign music was censored in the Soviet Union. So bootleggers made illegal records out of old X-ray film: the jazz on bones.

Categories: 20th century history, Arts & recreation, Europe, History, Music, North & Central Asia, Places, Politics & law
Abbey
By The Generalist Posted on August 5, 2019August 4, 2019

Night thoughts

Existential and spiritual crises seem to appear in the middle of the night – at least, according to various Catholic saints, poets, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sparklehorse and Danger Mouse they do.

Categories: Arts & recreation, Literature, Music, Religion & belief
Mariachi
By The Generalist Posted on July 1, 2019June 27, 2019

Long note

Malagueña Salerosa is a Mexican Son Huasteco song covered hundreds of times (including versions by Plácido Domingo, José Feliciano, and Avenged Sevenfold). It’s also a challenge: how long can a singer sustain a single note?

Categories: Arts & recreation, Music
Grunge
By The Generalist Posted on June 15, 2019June 2, 2019

Grunge speak

In 1992, an earnest New York Times reporter asked Megan Jasper, a former receptionist for Sub-Pop Records, for slang used by the nascent grunge scene. There was no such slang… so she made it up. And they printed it.

Categories: Arts & recreation, Language, Music
Yma Sumac
By The Generalist Posted on June 12, 2019June 12, 2019

Peruvian octaves

The Peruvian singer Yma Sumac had a vocal range of four or five octaves – far beyond most singers, and one of the widest ranges on record.

Categories: Arts & recreation, Music, Places, South America
Quartet programme
By The Generalist Posted on May 22, 2019April 28, 2021

Music at the end of time

Olivier Messiaen was one of the most prominent classical composers of the 20th century, and his most famous work – the Quartet for the End of Time – was first performed in a POW camp in Germany.

Categories: 20th century history, Arts & recreation, Europe, History, Military, Music, Places
Guidonian Hand
By The Generalist Posted on April 3, 2019March 17, 2019

Short hand

The hand is a flexible and convenient mnemonic device. The knuckle mnemonic tells us the number of days in a month, but a musical mnemomic called the Guidonian hand has been around for eight hundred years.

Categories: Arts & recreation, History, Medieval history, Music
1960s radio
By The Generalist Posted on March 30, 2019April 28, 2021

Pirate radio

New Zealand had no private radio stations in the early 1960s. The government monopoly was broken by a “pirate” radio station, Radio Hauraki, which broadcast from an old boat anchored in international waters in the Hauraki Gulf.

Categories: 20th century history, Arts & recreation, History, Music, Oceania, Places
Alice Coltrane
By The Generalist Posted on March 20, 2019December 17, 2021

Jazz harp

When most people think of jazz they don’t think of the harp. But in the 1960s and 70s Alice Coltrane recorded two dozen albums of jazz with the harp in a central role.

Categories: Arts & recreation, Music, North & Central America, Places, Religion & belief

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