Thursday, December 1, 2011

Robert E. Conot

Journalist and editor -- via the Washington Post.

Horacio Villafane aka Gamexane

Musician; founder of Todos tus Muertos -- via Tiny Mix Tapes.

Gerald Laing

Artist -- via the Telegraph.

Rauf Khalid

Writer, director and actor -- via the Express Tribune.

Tom Wicker

Journalist -- via the New York Times.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Coco Robicheaux aka Curtis Arceneaux

Bluesman -- via the New Orleans Times-Picayune.

Yukio Nishimoto

Hall of Fame (Japan) baseball player and manager -- via the Daily Yomiuri. Known as the "Great Tragic Leader" due to his never winning the Japan Series; however, he won eight Pacific League pennants.

Leonid Borodin

Novelist, journalist and dissident -- via russkiymir.ru.

Stephen Robertson

Comedian, actor and lawyer -- via breakingnews.heraldscotland.com.

Ustad Sultan Khan

Musician and singer -- via The Statesman.


Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Patrice O'Neal

Comedian -- via the New York Daily News. An incredibly funny guy!


Ron Lyle

Heavyweight boxer -- via the Denver Post.

Louis McKee

Poet -- via neastphilly.com.

Hans Reichel

Experimental guitarist, inventor, designer, composer -- via coilhouse.net.

Hassan Abdullah aka Stanley Barber

Jazzman -- via pressofatlanticcity.com.

Karel Hubacek

Architect -- via Yahoo News.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Olga Bayrack Bloom

Violinist, violist and the creator of the profoundly pleasant Bargemusic classic music series in New York City -- via the New York Times.

Bargemusic from GVP Selections on Vimeo.

George Daniels

Master watchmaker -- via the Economist.

Jeno Paulucci aka Luigino Francesco Paulucci

Food magnate; inventor of Chun King prepackaged Chinese food, and the pizza roll! -- via the New York Times. Thanks to the genius of Stan Freberg, the commercial for Jeno's Pizza Rolls will live forever (see below).

Ruth Stone

Poet -- via the New York Times.

Montserrat Figueras

Soprano who specialized in early classical music -- via the New York Times.

Ken Russell

"It is a pity when one, either through force of circumstance or because one is afraid of being ridiculed by others, won't produce and expose to everyone that little spark of something special which is unique to him alone." -- Ken Russell
Film director -- via the New York Times. One of the strangest and most controversial of the "great directors," his most popular works include "Women in Love," "Tommy" and "Altered States." Most people don't like his work -- it is over-the-top, vulgar, graphic, sexually obsessive, blasphemous, deliberately and gratuitously controversial. Even for those who count themselves as fans, his films are extremely problematic, hit-and-miss.

However, his movies are passionate and beautiful, and contain brilliant insights. It's largely forgotten that he reinvented the documentary film in the late 1950s and early 1960s, using devices such as dramatic reenactments and nonobjective passages set to music. He could do commercial, genre film -- "Billion Dollar Brain" and "Lair of the White Worm" -- but his best good-crazy stuff were hallucinogenic runs at the barriers of good taste and consensual reality. My faves: "Mahler" and "Isadora Duncan, the Biggest Dancer in the World."

Here is a link to a good general introduction to his work on video -- it is neither family-friendly nor safe for work! Of course, how could it be -- it's Ken Russell!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpZagdBC8v8

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Saturday, November 26, 2011

"Michigan Mike" Torpie

Nice photo by Eric Abramson!
Musical entrepreneur; concert promoter -- via the Daily Camera.

Friday, November 25, 2011