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Everything posted by 7/4
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Motian/Frisell/Lovano Live at the Village Vanguard
7/4 replied to Guy Berger's topic in Live Shows & Festivals
I never made it back this week (time, not money), but that was an amazing show last week. -
I didn't know I missed 377777. Damm. ← Your post was ##413131. Does that make up for it? ← I think I'll live.
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Anthony Braxton's Comp. 247 (dedicated to Oum Kaltsoum, check her out) is for him, James Fei (also on a bunch of wind instruments) and Matthew Welch on bagpipes.
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I didn't know I missed 377777. Damm.
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That's great you had a good 'un, and many more.
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Coverdale is a poodle. And not even a good one.
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Favorite mythological hero/god/goddess
7/4 replied to jazzbo's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
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Favorite mythological hero/god/goddess
7/4 replied to jazzbo's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Amen. -
So do I, sometimes with Byrd on background... ← Admiral Byrd?
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← That story looks real familiar.
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September 11, 2005 Versatile Musician Gatemouth Brown Dies By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filed at 7:15 a.m. ET BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- Clarence ''Gatemouth'' Brown, the singer and guitarist who built a 50-year career playing blues, country, jazz and Cajun music, died Saturday in his hometown of Orange, Texas, where he had gone to escape Hurricane Katrina. He was 81. Brown, who had been battling lung cancer and heart disease, was in ill health for the past year, said Rick Cady, his booking agent. Cady said the musician was with his family at his brother's house when he died. Brown's home in Slidell, La., a bedroom community of New Orleans, was destroyed by Katrina, Cady said. ''He was completely devastated,'' Cady said. ''I'm sure he was heartbroken, both literally and figuratively. He evacuated successfully before the hurricane hit, but I'm sure it weighed heavily on his soul.'' Although his career first took off in the 1940s with blues hits ''Okie Dokie Stomp'' and ''Ain't That Dandy,'' Brown bristled when he was labeled a bluesman. In the second half of his career, he became known as a musical jack-of-all-trades who played a half-dozen instruments and culled from jazz, country, Texas blues, and the zydeco and Cajun music of his native Louisiana. By the end of his career, Brown had more than 30 recordings and won a Grammy award in 1982. ''I'm so unorthodox, a lot of people can't handle it,'' Brown said in a 2001 interview. Brown's versatility came partly from a childhood spent in the musical mishmash of southwestern Louisiana and southeastern Texas. He was born in Vinton, La., and grew up in Orange, Texas. Brown often said he learned to love music from his father, a railroad worker who sang and played fiddle in a Cajun band. Brown, who was dismissive of most of his contemporary blues players, named his father as his greatest musical influence. ''If I can make my guitar sound like his fiddle, then I know I've got it right,'' Brown said. Cady said Brown was quick-witted, ''what some would call a 'codger.''' Brown started playing fiddle by age 5. At 10, he taught himself an odd guitar picking style he used all his life, dragging his long, bony fingers over the strings. In his teens, Brown toured as a drummer with swing bands and was nicknamed ''Gatemouth'' for his deep voice. After a brief stint in the Army, he returned in 1945 to Texas, where he was inspired by blues guitarist T-Bone Walker. Brown's career took off in 1947 when Walker became ill and had to leave the stage at a Houston nightclub. The club owner invited Brown to sing, but Brown grabbed Walker's guitar and thrilled the crowd by tearing through ''Gatemouth Boogie'' -- a song he claimed to have made up on the spot. He made dozens of recordings in the 1940s and '50s, including many regional hits -- ''Okie Dokie Stomp,'' ''Boogie Rambler,'' and ''Dirty Work at the Crossroads.'' But he became frustrated by the limitations of the blues and began carving a new career by recording albums that featured jazz and country songs mixed in with the blues numbers. ''He is one of the most underrated guitarists, musicians and arrangers I've ever met, an absolute prodigy,'' said Colin Walters, who is working on Brown's biography. ''He is truly one of the most gifted musicians out there. ''He never wanted to be called a bluesman, but I used to tell him that though he may not like the blues, he does the blues better than anyone,'' added Walters. ''He inherited the legacy of great bluesmen like Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker, but he took what they did and made it better.'' Brown -- who performed in cowboy boots, cowboy hat and Western-style shirts -- lived in Nashville in the early 1960s, hosting an R&B television show and recording country singles. In 1979, he and country guitarist Roy Clark recorded ''Makin' Music,'' an album that included blues and country songs and a cover of the Billy Strayhorn-Duke Ellington classic ''Take the A-Train.'' Brown recorded with Eric Clapton, Ry Cooder, Bonnie Raitt and others, but he took a dim view of most musicians -- and blues guitarists in particular. He called B.B. King one-dimensional. He dismissed his famous Texas blues contemporaries Albert Collins and Johnny Copeland as clones of T-Bone Walker, whom many consider the father of modern Texas blues. ''All those guys always tried to sound like T-Bone,'' Brown said. Survivors include three daughters and a son.
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Motian/Frisell/Lovano Live at the Village Vanguard
7/4 replied to Guy Berger's topic in Live Shows & Festivals
from todays NY Times: -
Brain May Still Be Evolving, Studies Hint
7/4 replied to 7/4's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
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Brain May Still Be Evolving, Studies Hint
7/4 replied to 7/4's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Is there anything about looking like a poodle that's intelligent? Unless, of course, you're a poodle or a woman. -
Brain May Still Be Evolving, Studies Hint
7/4 replied to 7/4's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Brian May. -
Brain May Still Be Evolving, Studies Hint
7/4 replied to 7/4's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Ask Brian. -
Brain May Still Be Evolving, Studies Hint
7/4 replied to 7/4's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
He very well may be. -
Doesn't look like George has food on his mind.
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September 9, 2005 Brain May Still Be Evolving, Studies Hint By NICHOLAS WADE, nyt Two genes involved in determining the size of the human brain have undergone substantial evolution in the last 60,000 years, researchers say, leading to the surprising suggestion that the brain is still undergoing rapid evolution. The discovery adds weight to the view that human evolution is still a work in progress, since previous instances of recent genetic change have come to light in genes that defend against disease and confer the ability to digest milk in adulthood. It had been widely assumed until recently that human evolution more or less stopped 50,000 years ago. The new finding, reported in today's issue of Science by Bruce T. Lahn of the University of Chicago, and colleagues, could raise controversy because of the genes' role in determining brain size. New versions of the genes, or alleles as geneticists call them, appear to have spread because they enhanced brain function in some way, the report suggests, and they are more common in some populations than others. But several experts strongly criticized this aspect of the finding, saying it was far from clear that the new alleles conferred any cognitive advantage or had spread for that reason. Many genes have more than one role in the body, and the new alleles could have been favored for some other reason, these experts said, such as if they increased resistance to disease. Even if the new alleles should be shown to improve brain function, that would not necessarily mean that the populations where they are common have any brain-related advantage over those where they are rare. Different populations often take advantage of different alleles, which occur at random, to respond to the same evolutionary pressure, as has happened in the emergence of genetic defenses against malaria, which are somewhat different in Mediterranean and African populations. If the same is true of brain evolution, each population might have a different set of alleles for enhancing function, many of which remain to be discovered. The Chicago researchers began their study with two genes, known as microcephalin and ASPM, that came to light because they are disabled in a disease called microcephaly. People with the condition are born with a brain much smaller than usual, often with a substantial shrinkage of the cerebral cortex, that seems to be a throwback to when the human brain was a fraction of its present size. Last year, Dr. Lahn, one of a select group of researchers supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, showed that a group of 20 brain-associated genes, including microcephalin and ASPM, had evolved faster in the great ape lineage than in mice and rats. He concluded that these genes might have had important roles in human evolution. As part of this study, he noticed that microcephalin and ASPM had an unusual pattern of alleles. With each gene, one allele was much more common than all the others. He and his colleagues have now studied the worldwide distribution of the alleles by decoding the DNA of the two genes in many different populations. They report that with microcephalin, a new allele arose about 37,000 years ago, although it could have appeared as early as 60,000 or as late as 14,000 years ago. About 70 percent of people in most European and East Asian populations carry this allele of the gene, but it is much rarer in most sub-Saharan Africans. With the other gene, ASPM, a new allele emerged 14,100 to 500 years ago, the researchers favoring a midway date of 5,800 years. The allele has attained a frequency of about 50 percent in populations of the Middle East and Europe, is less common in East Asia, and is found at low frequency in some sub-Saharan Africa peoples. The Chicago team suggests that the new microcephalin allele may have arisen in Eurasia or as the first modern humans emigrated from Africa some 50,000 years ago. They note that the ASPM allele emerged about the same time as the spread of agriculture in the Middle East 10,000 years ago and the emergence of the civilizations of the Middle East some 5,000 years ago, but say that any connection is not yet clear. Dr. Lahn said there might be a fair number of genes that affect the size of the brain, each making a small difference yet one that can be acted on by natural selection. "It's likely that different populations would have a different makeup of these genes, so it may all come out in the wash," he said. In other words, East Asians and Africans probably have other brain-enhancing alleles, not yet discovered, that have spread to high frequency in their populations. He said he expected that more such allele differences between populations would come to light, as have differences in patterns of genetic disease. "I do think this kind of study is a harbinger for what might become a rather controversial issue in human population research," Dr. Lahn said. But he said his data and other such findings "do not necessarily lead to prejudice for or against any particular population." A greater degree of concern was expressed by Francis S. Collins, director of the National Human Genome Research Institute. Dr. Collins said that even if the alleles were indeed under selection, it was still far from clear why they had risen to high frequency, and that "one should resist strongly the conclusion that it has to do with brain size, because the selection could be operating on any other not yet defined feature." He said he was worried about the way these papers will be interpreted. Sarah Tishkoff, a geneticist at the University of Maryland and a co-author of both studies, said the statistical signature of selection on the two genes was "one of the strongest that I've seen." But she, like Dr. Collins, said that "we don't know what these alleles are doing" and that specific tests were required to show that they in fact influenced brain development or were selected for that reason. Dr. Lahn acknowledges this point, writing in his article that "it remains formally possible that an unrecognized function of microcephalin outside of the brain is actually the substrate of selection." Another geneticist, David Goldstein of Duke University, said that the new study was "very well done," but that "it is a real stretch to argue for example that microcephalin is under selection and that that selection must be related to brain size or cognitive function." The gene could have risen to prominence through a random process known as genetic drift, Dr. Goldstein said. Richard Klein, an archaeologist who has proposed that modern human behavior first appeared in Africa because of some genetic change that promoted innovativeness, said the time of emergence of the microcephalin allele "sounds like it could support my idea." If the allele did support enhanced cognitive function, "it's hard to understand why it didn't get fixed at 100 percent nearly everywhere," he said. Dr. Klein suggested the allele might have spread for a different reason, that as people colonizing East Asia and Europe pushed north, they adapted to colder climates. Commenting on critics' suggestions that the alleles could have spread for reasons other than the effects on the brain, Dr. Lahn said he thought such objections were in part scientifically based and in part because of a reluctance to acknowledge that selection could affect a trait as controversial as brain function. The microcephalin and ASPM genes are known to be involved in determining brain size and so far have no other known function, he said. They are known to have been under strong selective pressure as brain size increased from monkeys to humans, and the chances seem "pretty good" the new alleles are continuing that, he said. Dr. Lahn said he had tested Dr. Goldstein's idea of alleles' spreading through drift and found it unlikely.
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I remember one short I saw. And many photo shoots that looked too fine.
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He was even in a Jeff Beck video.
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There has to be a musical use for this device...
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Motian/Frisell/Lovano Live at the Village Vanguard
7/4 replied to Guy Berger's topic in Live Shows & Festivals
I'm glad I went (thanks for reminding me Guy!). What an amazing show, I think I'll catch a show or two next week.