This Monday evening, Sahr Ngaujah and the band from the Broadway show Fela!, a tribute to the Nigerian musician and political activist Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, considered "the father of Afro-beat" (there's a good short biography here), performed music from the show at St. Ann's Warehouse, a theater venue in the DUMBO neighborhood of Brooklyn. The show was meant to be performed outdoors, in Brooklyn Bridge Park, but was moved indoors because of rain. My friend and neighbor Karl Junkersfeld was on hand to make the video above. Enjoy!
Wednesday, October 06, 2010
Sahr Ngaujah and company do songs from Fela! at St. Ann's Warehouse, Brooklyn
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Claude Scales
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11:28 PM
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Tuesday, October 05, 2010
MLB playoffs begin: a salute to the Minnesota Twins
I'm not a Twins fan, and my only significant contacts with Minnesota are: (1) having married my first wife there; and (2) as a fifth year law firm associate with very little litigation experience, being tapped on a day's notice to fly out there and take two depositions in a fiercely contested private antitrust suit, in one of which the deponent was implacably hostile. Nevertheless, once again picking up a cue from Eliot Wagner, I feel compelled to post the above video of The Baseball Project doing the Twins anthem "Please Don't Call Them Twinkies", featuring a lead vocal by Twins fan Craig Finn of the Hold Steady. Last Wednesday evening, again through the good offices of Eliot, I had the pleasure of meeting TBP co-founder Steve Wynn and drummer (and Twins fan) Linda Pitmon, at the Amygdaloids concert at Don Hill's (about which more in a later post).
I was hoping also to find a video of an earlier Twins song, dating from the run-up to their first World Series victory in 1987, "My Baby Waves the Homer Hanky", obviously based on the 1966 Tommy James and the Shondells hit "Hanky Panky". Unfortunately, no such video exists, but I did find this clip of hanky-waving when the Twins won the tie breaker for the American League Central title last year:
Tomorrow the Twins, once again AL Central champs and having the league's best record, will face the wild card, and defending world champion, Yanks at the Twins' new stadium, Target Field. I hope to see lots of hankies waving in this series.
As for longer-term loyalties for these playoffs, the Mets having fallen short yet again, I'm pinning my hopes on my old home town's team, the Rays.
Update: Based on the results of the first two games, it seems I've managed to curse both the Twins and the Rays. (Think of the '04 Red Sox...the '04 Red Sox....)
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Claude Scales
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6:10 PM
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Saturday, October 02, 2010
Gliese 581g, the "Goldilocks" planet.
By now you've likely read the news that an Earth-like planet has been found in the solar system of a nearby star, Gliese 581. According to the Washington Post story:
The planet, called Gliese 581g, is quite close at 20 light years from Earth's solar system. It is considered to be in the habitable zone because of its distance from its sun and its size.We don't know yet if there is any water, or any atmosphere. Gliese 581g differs from Earth in one important way. Like our moon, and like Mercury, the time it takes to rotate on its axis is synchronous with its orbital period, which means that it keeps one side facing its sun (or, in the case of the moon, Earth) at all times, while the other side stays in darkness. The side permanently facing the sun would be too hot to support life, while the dark side would be too cold. Nevertheless, there would be a band between the bright and dark sides--a "twilight zone", if you will--where temperatures could be moderate enough to accommodate life. It strikes my layman's mind, however, that if Gliese 581g had an earth-like atmosphere, such a tremendous temperature difference would result in a huge difference in atmospheric pressure, which in turn would give rise to some ferocious weather, perhaps severe enough to preclude life, at least on the surface.
Together, those two measurements tell scientists that any water on the planet will be in liquid form, and that the planet is large enough to have the gravitational pull to hold an atmosphere around it.
What's really exciting to me about this discovery, apart from its being the first of a planet similar in important respects to earth, is that it's so close to us. Since, so far as I know, there's no reason to believe that our immediate galactic neighborhood is more likely than any other (except, perhaps, near the galactic center) to include solar systems that have earth-like planets, the fact that there are two separated by only twenty light years suggests that such systems are fairly common.
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Claude Scales
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12:59 AM
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Labels: Astronomy
