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Straight Up | Jan Herman

Arts, Media & Culture News with 'tude

Archives for 2004

QUICK KICKS

April 27, 2004 by cmackie

Kyle Gann, postclassical composer extraordinaire and fellow ArtsJournal blogger, says he gets no kicks from public performances of his music. So where does he get them? Alone, in the studio, writing his stuff. Here’s the stuff he writes. We get our kicks from listening to it, especially his piano studies. Stuff like “Nude Rolling Down […]

FREEBIE FOR ALL

April 27, 2004 by cmackie

For any folks who have nothing to do and no money to do it on: There’s a free prepostclassical concert Wednesday at 1 p.m. in Alice Tully Hall (Broadway at 66th St.) in Manhattan. We have it on good authority that several postgrad Juilliard conductors are to take turns leading the Juilliard Conductors’ Orchestra in […]

NEWS FROM THE OZARKS

April 27, 2004 by cmackie

We don’t usually get to read what people in the Ozarks are reading. When an editorial from last week’s Arkansas Times came our way, we realized they’re reading what we’re reading. Have a look: Scroll down to the second bullet or digest it here. It’s taken from an interview with John Hess, author of “My […]

OH, THOSE PRIZES

April 26, 2004 by cmackie

Unless I’m wrong, pandas at the zoo get more press attention than the winners of the Los Angeles Times Book Prizes. This year’s winners were named over the weekend. They included Henry Wiencek in history, for “An Imperfect God,” and Ishmael Reed, who received the Robert Kirsch Award for “Blues City: A Walk in Oakland.”  Did […]

THE SLEEP OF THE IMMORTALS

April 26, 2004 by cmackie

Once upon a time Ernest Hemingway wrote a tribute, “On the American Dead in Spain” (scroll to page 37), to the 800 members of the American Lincoln Brigade who gave their lives for the Republican cause against Franco’s fascists during the Spanish Civil War. His tribute begins: “The dead sleep cold in Spain tonight. … It was […]

A WOMAN WITH HER IRISH UP

April 23, 2004 by cmackie

I wish I’d known this woman. Have a look at some of her columns and memorable words. Robin Toner’s touching obituary quotes her as saying: “I should confess that I always felt a little sorry for people who didn’t work for newspapers.” She said it before “the recent troubles,” to use an Irish phrase for […]

THE ONION SYNDROME

April 23, 2004 by cmackie

They were trying to be funny. Publishers Weekly’s PW Daily for Booksellers actually published this in an email distributed to subscribers: Books Too Boring Compared to TV Trade book sales fell 100% to $0.0 in 2003, according to the Association of American Publishers, as a bumper crop of compelling reality shows ranging from Average Joe […]

DISSING FLUXUS

April 23, 2004 by cmackie

Back in March, we took notice of the Dieter Roth retrospective at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. ArtsJournal colleague John Perreault recently reviewed it and quoted Roth dissing the Fluxus group with which he was associated: In fact, Roth hated Fluxus: “It was the club of the untalented who made a verbal virtue of their […]

THE ARTS FROM TOP TO BOTTOM

April 21, 2004 by cmackie

The Guardian in London has launched a week of arts coverage by guest editors, and it’s not to be missed. On Monday the < FONT color=#003399>Franz Ferdinand issue had “a different take” on tabloid newspapers’ topless pictures (an article < FONT color=#003399>about censorship by the photographer Wolfgang Tillmans, who shot this bottomless image); a tale of < FONT color=#003399>music lessons (have they […]

STALIN, CLASSICAL PIANIST?

April 21, 2004 by cmackie

Book critic Michiko Kakutani has the fine habit of writing accurate reviews. I trust them. The other day, though, her review of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar struck a weird note. Was Stalin, as she seemed to allege, a classical pianist? Quoting the book’s author, Simon Sebag Montefiore, she wrote: Stalin, Mr. Montefiore […]

WHAT LANGUAGE ARE WE SPEAKING?

April 21, 2004 by cmackie

Apparently a different one from Donald (“You bet!”) Rumsfeld, whose command of verbal tactics challenges the basic meaning of words. For instance, when asked Tuesday whether the Pentagon was considering the deployment of more troops to Iraq, he replied: “Are we considering it? No. But have we prepared? You bet.” It would take the editors […]

THAT’S ENTERTAINMENT

April 20, 2004 by cmackie

Strange to say, one of Straight Up’s most faithful readers is a raving rightwing lunatic who sends nicely designed but anonymous emails telling us how great we are, except for what he considers our raving leftwing lunacy. Because we’re so bloody fair-minded, we thought we’d give him the soapbox we keep in the corner for […]

MR. WAFFLES

April 20, 2004 by cmackie

Always good to see the editorial page of The New York Times ratifying our snap judgments. The editorial board must be genteel, of course. It cannot be as blunt as we were about Colin Powell, but its considered opinion this morning is pretty much the same. This is what we said yesterday: So he warned […]

OF PRINCIPLE AND BODY COUNTS

April 19, 2004 by cmackie

So Colin Powell didn’t want to go to war. So he warned our dopey Maximum Leader about owning Iraq. Let’s not make the U.S. Secretary of State a hero. Isn’t he the man of principle who went to the U.N. with so-called proof of WMD in Iraq, which he in fact doubted? Didn’t his diplomatic […]

HE’S OUR CALVIN TRILLIN

April 19, 2004 by cmackie

What Calvin Trillin’s poetry is to The Nation, Leon Freilich’s is to Straight Up. Noting our question earlier today — we asked for thoughts on “whether ‘the little fucker’ should be our Maximum Leader’s new designation” — Leon penned us this verse: BUNGLE BOY “The little fucker” goes too far;The guy ain’t quite a bloody czar.Something more moderate is dueThe man […]

IT WASN’T RAP THEY USED

April 17, 2004 by cmackie

It was ’60s and ’70s hard rock. Jason Keyser, the AP reporter who filed the news story from Falluja that U.S. troops challenged insurgents to come out and fight by blasting rock music at them, identified AC/DC and Jimi Hendrix as the artists whose music they used.  That at least shows excellent taste and probably that the troops […]

WEAPONIZED BEATS

April 16, 2004 by cmackie

Wrapping the week: U.S. troops reportedly blasted rock music at the insurgents in Falluja to provoke them into a fight. Now that’s an idea that Rummy, Wolfie and the boys never thought of: weaponizing American pop culture to win the war in Iraq. What beats do you think the troops used? 2Pac’s? Eminem’s? 50 Cent’s? Snoop Dogg’s? Jay-z’s? Notorious B.I.G.’s? Ludacris’s? Dr. Dre’s? Nelly’s? […]

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Jan Herman

When not listening to Bach or Cuban jazz pianist Chucho Valdes, or dancing to salsa, I like to play jazz piano -- but only in the privacy of my own mind.
Another strange fact... Read More…

About

My Books

Several books of poems have been published in recent years by Moloko Print, Statdlichter Presse, Phantom Outlaw Editions, and Cold Turkey … [Read More...]

Straight Up

The agenda is just what it says: news of arts, media & culture delivered with attitude. Or as Rock Hudson once said in a movie: "Man is the only … [Read More...]

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