May 11, 2010 archive

Absolute Music

Sigh.

I promise to try and get away from the stranglehold of Middle Europeans and explore some more western composers, but I can’t help recalling that commercial for 100 famous classical music themes.

You know, the one that intones- “And who can forget Polovtsian Dance #17 (Stranger in Paradise) by Borodin?” as screen after screen of titles scrolls up.

Yeah, well, Borodin.

His day gig was as a chemist where he is justly famous for his research on aldehydes and unjustly famous for the Hunsdiecker reaction.

His ouvre as a composer reflects his amateur status, consisting of 2 Symphonies and an Opera, Prince Igor, that contains the Polovtsian Dances and was finished by Rimsky-Korsakov and Glazunov after his death in 1887, as well as some Chamber Music.

He was a big proponent of absolute music as opposed to the programmatic music embraced by many of the popular composers of the time (for instance the Sibelius piece we looked at last night).

His most powerful statement of this philosophy is found in his 2 String Quartets.  His second one is more famous, but I have included both below the fold.  Each is perfomed by The Borodin Quartet which, since they are moderately famous and have recorded many composers, made my search… interesting.

The First Quartet (which starts on the left) was posted by novichok3, the Second by truecrypt.

Greece: A Massive Transfer Of Wealth to German Banks

Is a restructuring of Greek sovereign debt inevitable? What would restructuring entail? Does the current E.U. plan envision restructuring? Is the current plan more concerned re the health of certain European banks than Greece? – kathaa, West Bloomfield, Mich.

Yves Smith: Yes, it is inevitable. The Greek austerity program is the most daunting in modern times. Argentina defaulted under a much less demanding program. The Greek population also appears to understand intuitively the record of Latin American austerity programs, that they are a transfer from the public to the banks, and they do not appear willing to make the depth of sacrifice demanded of them. Many experts believe the euro zone is wasting valuable firepower and credibility on Greece, when it would have done better to restructure Greece now and use any backstop funds for the other euro zone members under stress.

….Unless a country can engineer a very large increase in exports, which usually happens by depreciating its currency, trying to reduce public- and private-sector debt at the same time results in a big economic contraction. That’s happening now in Ireland, where nominal G.D.P. has fallen over 18 percent. A fall of that magnitude makes it even harder to pay off existing debt.

http://economix.blogs.nytimes….

So, France and Germany are basically paying Greece to pay  their own banks. And contracting the Greek (and soon all of southern Europe) economy.  Remember that one of the conditions Germany placed on bailing out their own auto industry, was that the jobs created/saved would be in Germany-not in Spain or somewhere else. Likewise, their various stimulus packages were local as well. But now they’ve forced Greece to cut jobs, cut entitlements and retirement benefits, and raise taxes.

And of course this:


…Papandreou had recently met Sarkozy and French Prime Minister Francois Fillon in Paris. “Mr Fillon and Mr Sarkozy told Mr Papandreou: ‘We’re going to raise the money to help you, but you are going to have to continue to pay the arms contracts that we have with you’,” Cohn-Bendit said.

“In the past three months we have forced Greece to confirm several billion dollars in arms contracts. French frigates that the Greeks will have to buy for 2.5 billion euros. Helicopters, planes, German submarines.”

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/d…

May ’70: 11. The Campuses Start To Empty Out

Before following up on the strategy that college and university administrators were adopting to defuse the strike on many campuses, I want to tip the hat to the Canadian radicals who took a page from Richard Nixon and invaded the border town of Blaine, Washington from Vancouver on May 9.

Declaring they were doing it to strike at “sanctuaries for aggression,” the 500 or so young militants vowed that they’d go no further than 19 miles into US territory, the limit Nixon had placed on his Cambodia invasion. That far they didn’t get, retreating in good order into British Columbia after trashing the Bank of Commerce and most of the vehicles on a freight train hauling new autos. A joke, certainly, but a pretty pointed one and the first foreign invasion of any of the United States since the War of 1812.

Yesterday I wrote of how University administrators around the country were adopting or contemplating a strategy of proclaiming agreement with their protesting students and shutting down the campuses., declaring the school year ended early. This, folks who have read the third installment of this retrospective study may recall, was the strategy adopted by Yale president Kingman Brewster as he faced the May Day protests in New Haven.

I HATE being right!

A month and a half ago, I posted this essay on the state of the Supreme Court. In it, I stated:

Also, it must be noted, that the Obama administration has already signaled that it will use indefinite detention.  In addition, his administration has already floated the idea of preventive detention.

So… who do YOU think is going to be his next pick?

The quote finishes my essay which details out how if President Obama is serious about pushing an indefinite detention law, Elena Kagan would be his natural choice to replace Justice Stevens.

Guess who his nominee is to be?

Rig Survivor: Tale of Survival, Fear, Legal Tangles

You can take many of the reports we’ve been given and just imagine what happened when the rig exploded and since. There are always many story lines that can be followed, we can only be witness to what’s shown to us and stated by our media and others.

One of the tragic story lines, and now being finally mentioned in these tragic incidents, is the possibility of Post Traumatic Stress that may start to develop and what might cause the growth of in some of the individuals who survive.

Joseph Shapiro had a series of reports on NPR and tonight a video report and discussion with one of the survivors on the PBS News Hour.

Action Diary Deep water Drilling US Senate Committee

Rescheduled for May 11th the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee is having a hearing on deep water drilling.

RESCHEDULED FULL COMMITTEE HEARING: to review current issues related to offshore oil and gas development (SR-325). OVERFLOW ROOM, SD-366.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

10:00 AM

The purpose of the hearing is to review current issues related to offshore oil and gas development including the Department of the Interior’s recent five year planning announcements and the accident in the Gulf of Mexico involving the offshore oil rig Deepwater Horizon (SR-325). OVERFLOW ROOM, SD-366.

Note: originally scheduled for May 6, 2010.

I Never Thought It Would Come To This

There’s only one thing left to say to these dirtbag oil companies and their pukishly ingratiating servants in Washington….

Impressions from a Picture

As I have said before sometimes I get these sort or psychic impressions from a picture.  Alberto Gonzales,Leo Strauss and our curent Pope Benedict are among the evil winners here.  This time however it was a name and then a thought.  Now why would I go start Googling Kagan+Satanic names.  I mean by all media accounts she is supposed to be fair and balanced but still.

30% of US fishery product due to faulty preventer valves leased by BP is now gone for up to ten years.  Swine+bird flu as the bioweapon reappears this fall or winter killing billions with a B and earth changes as in 12,500 year planetary massive civilization wiping out volcanic activity are perhaps two years away.  Yeah well this might all be alternative bullshit new age crap but I happen to find it far more credible.  Obama is level 5 on the scale of 47 secret classified security clearance levels.  That I do find credible.

Afternoon Edition

Afternoon Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 BP mulls risky ‘junk shot’ to stem US oil slick

by Alex Ogle, AFP

31 mins ago

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AFP) – In a sign Monday of growing desperation, BP contemplated plugging a gushing oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico with golf balls, tires and debris in a high-risk maneuver called a “junk shot.”

The British energy giant said its clean-up costs had reached 350 million dollars since the Deepwater Horizon rig sank 50 miles (80 kilometers) off the Louisiana coast on April 22 following an explosion that killed 11 workers.

The pressure on BP to plug the leak from a fractured pipe on the seabed is mounting as an estimated 210,000 gallons of crude spews into the sea each day, feeding fears of an environmental catastrophe.

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