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lipi

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Posts posted by lipi

  1. 6 hours ago, catesta said:

    Here is a word of the day specifically for you. Condescending 

    I'll use it in a sentence.  "That guy is a real condescending asshole". Is that proper? Do I need to add an exclamation point?

    Tsk, tsk. Name calling already, and with such poor punctuation to boot.

  2. 9 hours ago, catesta said:

    You're off the deep end if you think I was implying it was the other way.

     

    Ah, I see. "you guys" is supposed to refer back to "the majority of active members" and not to "a few people," then? In that case, I apologize and rather than give you grief about your political beliefs I will give you grief about your syntax. You can't switch subjects between clauses; that's not cricket.

  3. 8 hours ago, catesta said:

    Ah, very clever.

    There is maybe a few people that don't align politically with the majority of active members and yet you guys still can't help yourselves with the sprinkling of politics.

    Oof, buddy, you're off the deep end. You lost the popular vote, and you would on this board, too, by a wider margin still.

  4. 14 hours ago, catesta said:

    Nah, I read it correctly and didn't skip shit.

    Oh please. If you had read things correctly you would have said "It's not about the postmaster general, it's the Baltimore postmaster you should look at." Instead you said "she's only been with the USPS for 26 years."

    You don't get to invent some unmentioned antecedent for "she."

    So take your pick: you read incorrectly, or you skipped a step in your argument. There's no other option.

    15 hours ago, Big Beat Steve said:

    Why? As far as I can see Catesta refererred to the Baltimore postmaster(ess) all the time when reference was made to the fucked up situation in Baltimore.

    Whoever got the postmaster GENERAL in in the first place in connection with Baltimore got it wrong, not Catesta. The word that Catesta may have "skipped" was a word that did not belong there in the first place.

    That's still skipping the word, kids. If you want to take issue with the postmaster general being mentioned instead of some other official you feel is more appropriate, then you say *that*. They clearly didn't, but instead made a statement that could only be taken to refer to the postmaster general:

    Brad: You can probably thank that hack of a postmaster general. 

    catesta: You are probably right. She's only been with the USPS for 26 years and still has much to learn.

    If you want to have a meaningful dialogue, you can't throw all decent rules of language, logic, and rhetoric out the window.

  5. On 31/08/2020 at 10:43 AM, catesta said:

    Point by others = Baltimore mail woes blamed on Postmaster General.

    My point =  Postmaster of Baltimore and local staff is more responsible for mail woes than a dude that has been in office for 60 days regardless of his previous experience.

    No. That was your point only after it was pointed out to you that you didn't read the first post properly and skipped a word.

  6. San Diego State is also a place you could check. There was that article a month or two ago about Bram Dijkstra's collection going there. They took his collection whole, which many other places were unable or unwilling to do.

    Anyway, if you do start making a list of things to sell, definitely post it here. I'm enjoying "Turn Me Loose White Man" tremendously, and there are many things there I'd enjoy hearing more of.

     

  7. 3 hours ago, porcy62 said:

    From the PC headphone output into amp line in? Yes, and it sounds bad because headphone output isn't a line input and the PC headphone output usually sucks. Not trolling, promise.

    I assume you meant to write "headphone output isn't a line output" there. If so, is the issue that the signal has passed through an amplifier stage already, or is the issue that the impedance is lower?

    And can you elaborate on "usually sucks"? Distorted? Cut-off? Compressed?

    I would love to hear from others (T.D.?), too.

  8. What's "older"? I'm interested in most things pre-1940, and I still buy CDs, simply because a lot of stuff has not made it to download (let alone streaming) yet.

    You may also want to check with Michael, since he's been slowly selling a huge collection on this very forum.

    12 minutes ago, Chuck Nessa said:

    Guys like me are fucked.

    I always had the impression you were a producer—does that not translate well to downloads/streaming? Or is the issue that you have a catalogue of recordings, but that you cannot sell them in new formats without renegotiating rights? Genuinely curious to learn.

  9. I know almost nothing, but you should drop me a line anyway (that dance we both love @gmail.com). For one, I have nothing better to do, and now that you've planted the bug I am likely to spend the next week reading all about this stuff.

    One suggestion is to reach out to some well-known jazz archives and ask for advice or contacts. Rutgers University, the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, etc. You could even try Joe Bussard, as long as you don't tell him you're into Swing Era stuff. :)  Since it's only the process that matters, you can try classical collections, too. 

    In addition to Audition, Izotope RX Elements is probably worth a look. It's the consumer version of their professional thing, and it's only $29 (40 upside down $) right now (at least when I access the website from the US). Not sure whether they'll give you a download or try to charge you an arm and a leg to ship you a CD.

  10. No, but I can give you some irrelevant information instead. The move the dancer is doing is very likely either a "boogie forward" or an "eagle slide." No guarantee that's what he'd have called it himself at the time, though.

    (OK, fine, I have possibly relevant info, too, but I assume you already know this: William Claxton took that picture in 1960. The address is printed on the marquee, so location I'll leave to the astute reader.)

  11. Can't help you with those as I've never used them, but for the language barrier I can suggest something, at least.

    Use Chrome as your web browser. It has Google Translate integrated, so any page can be translated at the click of a button. The translations are more than good enough for Amazon.co.jp (at least into English—try Dutch at your own peril). It won't help with the third-party seller problem, of course.

     

  12. 34 minutes ago, GA Russell said:

    Anderson Cooper, 6/01:  “The president seems to think dominating Black people, dominating peaceful protesters, is law and order. It’s not.”

    Anderson Cooper is correct. You should really stop drinking the orange clown's Kool-Aid.

    Also, I would have thought you'd be in favour of looting. Imagine what great deals you can find for your bargain audio thread!

  13. Ken Burns's Jazz (with all its flaws that I'm sure you can find many discussions about here on the forum, if you so desire) is available on Amazon. It's free if you have Prime, otherwise $0.99 per episode.

    Netflix keeps trying to get me to watch "Chasing Trane" and some thing about Miles Davis. I have no interest in either, but maybe they're in your wheelhouse.

    If you enjoy classical music I can recommend some documentaries on YouTube. The first is the Schubert Trout with the million dollar quintet. Not Elvis, Lewis, Cash, and Perkins, but the even more staggering collection of Perlman, du Pré, Mehta, Pinchas, and Barenboim. I'm struggling to explain how good this is, both music and backstage bits. Just watch it. The fifteen seconds of Mehta-Perlman's Mendelssohn concerto alone is worth it.

     

    The second is "Jascha Heifetz: God's Fiddler". Listening to Heifetz for me is like listening to Django, Tatum, Armstrong, or Ella. He is *so* good that it makes you want to give up music in despair. 

     

    The third is "Ithzak Perlman: Virtuoso Violinist". Perlman's playing is as stunning as Heifetz's, and his sense of humour shines through everything.

    Bonus:

    Heifetz playing the Tchaikovsky, first movement: 

     

    And this amusing Perlman bit. I can't remember whether it's in the documentary I linked above or not. After a student in a master class displays some incredibly good staccato technique, Perlman tells an anecdote about Gingold and Ysaÿe:

     

  14. On 16/01/2020 at 10:42 AM, CJ Shearn said:

    The download has the same problems, the artist did not catch them.  I still like CD's too and yes hard copies can fail, but it's better to have a hard copy, even if you back up the digital because that too can fail. Plus, artists cannot autograph a file.  The sarcasm you intended did not come off

    You missed the point: with downloads the ordering is immaterial, since you decide the ordering. The secondary point, which you also missed in your eagerness to prove you understand the world, is that a download is trivially fixable: it's one quick copy of a file or a directory on a web server, and immediately everyone who wants to buy the music will obtain the corrected files.

    Don't dismiss the new just because you grew up with the old.

    As to the autographing: that's a new argument that no one in this thread had so far made, but sure, I guess? I have also never understood the mysterious draw of the autograph, but I understand there are those who do. I'm keen to hear what percentage of releases owned by the collective CD-or-bust crowd are autographed.

     

    And felser: SOMEone has to come down and scream at the top of their lungs in this forum every now and then, because otherwise it's just a recording of an echo chamber filled with 70 year old men. And not even a download of a recording. Some sort of weird old "CD" thing. What gives?

  15. On 13/01/2020 at 3:55 AM, CJ Shearn said:

    You do NOT want a CD of the Peterson.  I am publishing a review of it tommorrow.  The music is terrific, however there are mastering and post production errors that went unchecked.  The CD was initially pressed with the wrong track order, then pressed again with sequence errors still present.  I can confirm through digital promo and CD these errors are present.  Lydia Liebman has made journalists like myself aware of the issues with this album, Mr. Peterson did not catch these errors before the album went out

    And this, kids, is one of a dozen reasons why you want downloads and not physical media.

    The real mystery to me is how you lot complaining about the lack of outdated and inferior technology are putting up with an electric computing machine that sends messages through the æther. I, personally, far prefer to receive my pointless rants by Pony Express.

  16. 1 hour ago, Brad said:

    That’s a different issue. I was just keying on whether there is a difference between the two terms, nothing more.

    Thanks for the clarification. Now I'm curious, though: what's the purpose of Black's giving two different definitions? Is it just historical? It seems pretty insistent that there is a difference, even if the difference isn't always maintained!

    https://thelawdictionary.org/illegal/

    https://thelawdictionary.org/unlawful/

    "“Unlawful” and “illegal” are frequently used as synonymous terms, but, in the proper sense of the word, “unlawful,” as applied to promises, agreements, considerations, and the like, denotes that they are ineffectual in law because they involve acts which, although not illegal, i. e., positively forbidden, are disapproved of by the law, and are therefore not recognized as the ground of legal rights, either because they are immoral or because they are against public policy. "

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