-
While “right thing” may be an overstatement, it's a good thing to see a conservative pastor, especially a homophobic one, speaking out against Uganda's laws requiring imprisonment and imposing the death penalty for homosexual behavior. On the other hand, congratulating a pastor for speaking out against injustice is a classic “Congratulations. Did you want a cookie for that?” moment.
Friday Random 15: Out of Rotation
I keep a playlist in iTunes, and on my iPod, that consists of highly rated songs (4 stars or better) that I haven’t heard in at least a year. It’s called Out of Rotation, and it always surprises me in a positive way. Today, when I needed a pickup after car trouble, it came through. Here’s the playlist:
- Johnny Cash, “Belshazzar” (Complete Sun Singles, Vol. 2)
- Liz Phair, “Chopsticks” (Whip-Smart)
- Pernice Brothers, “Waiting for the Universe” (Yours, Mine and Ours)
- Sonic Youth, “Radical Adults Lick Godhead Style” (Murray Street)
- Ted Leo/Pharmacists, “The High Party” (Hearts of Oak)
- Yo La Tengo, “Nothing but You and Me” (Summer Sun)
- UNKLE, “Nursery Rhyme Breather” (Psyence Fiction)
- The Raconteurs, “Blue Veins” (Broken Boy Soldiers)
- The Raconteurs, “Intimate Secretary” (Broken Boy Soldiers)
- Pixies, “River Euphrates” (Surfer Rosa)
- Gillian Welch, “Revelator” (Time (The Revelator))
- Gillian Welch, “My First Lover” (Time (The Revelator))
- Chemical Brothers, “Elektrobank” (Dig Your Own Hole)
- Prince, “Wherever U Go, Whatever U Do” (Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic)
- Elvis Presley, “New Orleans” (The King of Rock ‘n” Roll: The Complete ’50s Singles)
Grab bag: Dynamics and Dragon
-
Actually, I do. I had no idea that the DOD was using system dynamics to plan their engagement in Afghanistan, but I feel a lot better knowing that someone is out there drawing those complex charts.
-
Interesting review of the new Dragon Dictation app. It sends your voice to their servers and the text back. Clever design. Hope it’s secure.
Yay us
-
Veracode is a finalist for Best Security Software Development Solution.
Grab bag: new news, old habits
-
Interesting. Like all good experiments it gets more interesting the deeper you go into it. I particularly like the timeline of news articles that trace developments in the story.
-
This. This is what makes a vein in my forehead twitch every time I hear about the RIAA going after someone for filesharing “because it hurts the artist.” If record companies devoted a fraction of the resources to paying their own damned bills that they do to tracking down peer-to-peer users, artists would be a lot better off.
Secrets and boarding passes
-
Good to have a little more transparency, even if it's accidental, around the TSA's processes.
Making wishes come true
-
It is, inevitably, humbling to show up for a routine gig and become a part of someone else’s story. That happened today as we performed at the Prudential Center at a free gig; at the end of the second set, we helped to make Victor’s wish a reality. When I think about how we take performing for granted… I don’t think I’ll take it for granted any more.
Grab bag: Pops, free Google DNS
-
Saturday is the first Boston Pops Christmas gig of the season, and it’s free!
-
Free DNS for Google. Easier to remember, too: 8.8.4.4 and 8.8.8.8.
Grab bag: Royalty madness
-
“Yes, we know that the numbers don’t add up, and it doesn’t matter.”
-
This might be a good solution for securing legacy applications where you don’t have the source code, or as an OS level feature. Generally speaking, it’s better to just fix the vulnerabilities.
Grammy-nominated blogger
The Grammy nominations for 2009 are out, and the Tanglewood Festival Chorus is on the list (along with Beyoncé and Lady Gaga, of course). Our recording of Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloe with the BSO under James Levine got the nod.
I was kind of hoping that our Brahms Requiem recording would be nominated–it’s certainly a more prominent chorus role, and I think it’s one of the best recordings available of the work. But I’m not complaining.
The only question is: do I put “Grammy nominated” on my resumé now? (Of course not, but it’s fun to contemplate.)
Update: I would be doing my BSO colleagues a disservice if I didn’t note that the album is also up for Best Engineered Classical Album and Best Orchestral Performance.
Grab bag: Farewell Charlie, IE6 go now
-
Charlie is now forever stuck on the MTA.
-
I hope that Microsoft gets through to these users, especially the corporate ones, but if all the security issues don’t get through to them then what will?
Groh, Groh, gone
-
The ignominious end of an era.
Discovering J.A. Morrow
There are two composers who pop up more consistently on recordings of the Virginia Glee Club than any other, across the years: E. A. Craighill, who is generally (though not completely correctly) credited with composing the “Good Old Song,” and J.A. Morrow, who composed the University’s official alma mater, “Virginia, Hail, All Hail.” The two songs are generally performed these days as one, and in fact they have more in common than their status as official or unofficial alma maters: both were composed by Virginia students who were apparently members of the Glee Club.
John Albert Morrow makes his earliest appearance in the documentary record, as I mentioned yesterday, performing solos in the chapel choir under the director of Alfred Lawrence Hall-Quest, on October 14, 1916. At the time, Hall-Quest was directing both the chapel choir and the Glee Club, so it’s a reasonable assumption that Morrow sang with both groups. We know that he also played piano and participated in missions on behalf of the YMCA to other parts of Virginia.
We also know that Morrow participated in other missions. The June 13, 1918 photo above, from the Holsinger archives, is one of a series of World War I photos taken by the studio. We don’t know what Morrow did in the war, other than the clue that he wears an Army uniform in the photo.
His University career spans both sides of the Great War and is a little odd: he is listed in the April 1917 University of Virginia Recordas being a masters student in mathematics, philosophy, and physics, having taken his undergraduate degree at Emory and Henry, while in 1920 he is listed as a student in the College. This may have been a typo, or he may have pursued additional undergrad classes after demobbing, but in 1921 he was listed (with an MA) as a teaching fellow in the Engineering department teaching Chemistry. He continues to appear in the Record variously as a BA and MA (presumably, he was working on the latter even in 1921) until 1925 and 1926, when he is listed as a summer session instructor in mathematics, affiliated with New York University. After that the trail goes cold, alas.
But there’s that one indisputable moment of fame: in 1923, his 1921 composition “Virginia, Hail, All Hail” won a contest as the best student alma mater song. No other official alma mater ever having been elected by the University, his work still holds a position of pride–even if none but attendees of Glee Club concerts will ever hear it.
Grab bag: Whither Groh?
-
OMFG.
-
I love how, in this article, the dismissal of Peter Lalich is singled out by Groh as a reason that he’s going downhill: “When the player who was designated ‘quarterback to the future’ was not available to us, it put us on a different course.” “Was not available”? You know, if you were any sort of coach, your key players wouldn’t be leaving Charlottesville with indictments around their necks. You’re responsible for their behavior.
J.A. Morrow, found
-
1918 photograph of “Virginia, Hail, All Hail (Ten Thousand Voices)” author J. A. Morrow at UVA in his WWI uniform.