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Posted by on dec 22, 2010

Donker kerstgedicht

[vodpod id=Video.5156383&w=425&h=350&fv=]

Nicholas Was…

older than sin, and his beard could grow no whiter. He wanted to die.

The dwarfish natives of the Arctic caverns did not speak his language, but conversed in their own, twittering tongue, conducted incomprehensible rituals, when they were not actually working in the factories.

Once every year they forced him, sobbing and protesting, into Endless Night. During the journey he would stand near every child in the world, leave one of the dwarves’ invisible gifts by its bedside. The children slept, frozen into time.

He envied Prometheus and Loki, Sisyphus and Judas. His punishment was harsher.

Ho.

Ho.

Ho.”

via Open Culture.

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Posted by on nov 26, 2010

Alice’s Restaurant verbeeld

Bij een voormalige studievriend hoorde ik jaren geleden voor het eerst Alice’s Restaurant van Arlo Guthrie. Vanmorgen postte het onvolprezen Open Culture een animatie ervan, Alice’s Restaurant Illustrated, op haar site:

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Posted by on nov 25, 2010

Cilinderopname van keuvelende Tsjaikovski (1890)

Cilinderopname van keuvelende Tsjaikovski (1890)

Toegegeven, als je niet weet dat het Tsjaikovski is die je in onderstaande cilinderopname uit 1890 hoort keuvelen met een aantal collega’s is het de aandacht nauwelijks waard. Maar het is hem echt en dat is de reden dat Open Culture deze opname een plaats gaf in hun overzicht 45 Great Cultural Icons. Over de opname:

This Edison phonograph cylinder recording from 1890 was made by Julius Block, a Russian Businessman of German descent (The Old Man with the Umbrella in this video) who became fascinated with the phonograph (and even convinced Tchaikovsky to sign an endorsement). The recording was re-discovered in the Pushkin archive of St.Petersburg, Russia in 1997, and was labelled with the names of the participants: Anton Rubinstein (composer), Elizaveta Lavrovskaya (singer), Peter Tchaikovsky (composer), Vassily Safonov (pianist and conductor), Alexandra Hubert (pianist), Julius Block (the host himself). One can imagine the scene – a group of eminent musicians each standing around this new ‘wonderful invention’, being gently encouraged to say something. So there are a few words of banter, some musical scales, whistles, etc., much of which is only just audible.

Here is the translated contents of this recording:
A. Rubinstein: What a wonderful thing [the phonograph].

J. Block: Finally.

E. Lawrowskaja: A disgusting…how he dares slyly to name me.

W. Safonov : (Sings a scale incorrectly).

P. Tchaikovsky: This trill could be better.

E. Lawrowskaja: (sings).

P. Tchaikovsky: Block is good, but Edison is even better.

E. Lawrowskaja: (sings) A-o, a-o.

W. Safonow: (In German) Peter Jurgenson in Moskau.

P. Tchaikovsky: Who just spoke? It seems to have been Safonow. (Whistles)

bron

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Posted by on nov 11, 2010

Paul Auster leest voor uit Sunset Park

Onderstaande video van Paul Auster (mijn favoriete auteur) die voorleest uit zijn nieuwe roman Sunset Park stond op de site van Open Culture. NPR zegt over het boek:

“Sunset Park brings us a new Paul Auster, shifting from the intellectually exhilarating, elevating realms of metafiction and postmodern detective fiction to a story grounded in the potent emotions of love, loss, regret and vengeance, and the painful reality of current-day calamities like evictions and bankruptcies.”

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Posted by on okt 20, 2010

Sir Ken Robinson: A Creative Education

Open Culture toonde zojuist onderstaande animatie, gebaseerd op een lezing van Ken Robinson, in mijn RSS-lezer. Het fragment komt uit een langere voordracht van Robinson, die hier te vinden is.

Now, with the latest RSA video, Sir Ken returns to delve deeper into this basic question. He asks, Why do schools kill creativity? And why is this problem built into the modern educational system? And how can we bring a “paradigm” shift – one that will let schools foster creativity at long last?”

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