Yes, seriously, Chicago Alderman George Cardenas proposed this.
And the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International chimed in, saying that 'drones can be a boon to law enforcement agencies by keeping officers out of dangerous situations, helping with search and rescue missions, responding to natural disasters and saving on the bottom line. The group claims drones can operate for as little as $25 to $75 per hour, which is far less than the $400-per-hour cost of using a manned helicopter.' And -- “The technology could certainly be used to help keep children safe. Importantly, however, it is up to local leaders to determine whether this is an appropriate use in their community," according to AUVSI spokeswoman Melanie Hinton.
One wonders whether Mayor Rahm Emmanuel might not be in favor, since all the school closings that his administration mean that many school children who going to new schools will have to cross gang boundaries and to be "in the line of fire."
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Friday, September 27, 2013
drone life 4: Seymour Hersh
"Like killing people, how does [Obama] get away with the drone programme, why aren't we [journalists] doing more? How does he justify it? What's the intelligence? Why don't we find out how good or bad this policy is? Why do newspapers constantly cite the two or three groups that monitor drone killings. Why don't we do our own work?"
Seymour Hersh, to The Guardian, September 27, 2013.
Seymour Hersh, to The Guardian, September 27, 2013.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
drone life 3: Lynn Hill on "Capacity" (Vijay Iyer and Mike Ladd's Holding It Down: The Veterans' Dreams Project)
I learned of this thanks to a tweet of Teju Cole.
As you no doubt know, the great jazz pianist Vijay Iyer just received a prestigious MacArthur Award.
You will find him even more deserving when you learn, as I just have, of his recent release, with Mike Ladd, of Holding It Down: The Veterans' Dreams Project. I've only listened to a few tracks (it came out on September 24) but what I've heard is great. The publicity from Pi Recordings describes the album as follows: "a thought-provoking, sometimes frightening, and ultimately exhilarating combination of music, poetry and song, created from the actual dreams of young veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars." And check out the vid below that introduces the project.
But because I sometimes blog here (not very profoundly) about drones, I was particularly interested in the track "Capacity" (which you can listen to here), featuring the poetry and recollections of Lynn Hill, who worked as a drone operator, firing missiles remotely into Iraq from her base in Las Vegas. "Soft kill," she calls it. It's very powerful stuff.
Here's a section of her poem:
I have a capacity for war. I have a capacity for hate. I have a capacity for insanity. For anger. For lies. 525,600 minutes times 2, before I break into an explosion of thoughts, of insurgents and soft kills, and career moves. Capacity for destruction. Capacity for loss. Capacity for death, violence, nothingness. 24 months of pain and disgust. Actions of my hands accuse me. Guilty, charge. Unclear clear details and shaky intell, but still I pull the trigger. There’s a limit to madness. Gague clocks out at two years, but they serve up poison like entrees at Blueberry Hill. Crazy with a side of numb. It took 63,720,000 seconds to go from me to somebody else.
And check out the NEA interview with Lynn Hill, where she reflects more on her poetry and her work as a Predator Drone operator.
As you no doubt know, the great jazz pianist Vijay Iyer just received a prestigious MacArthur Award.
You will find him even more deserving when you learn, as I just have, of his recent release, with Mike Ladd, of Holding It Down: The Veterans' Dreams Project. I've only listened to a few tracks (it came out on September 24) but what I've heard is great. The publicity from Pi Recordings describes the album as follows: "a thought-provoking, sometimes frightening, and ultimately exhilarating combination of music, poetry and song, created from the actual dreams of young veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars." And check out the vid below that introduces the project.
But because I sometimes blog here (not very profoundly) about drones, I was particularly interested in the track "Capacity" (which you can listen to here), featuring the poetry and recollections of Lynn Hill, who worked as a drone operator, firing missiles remotely into Iraq from her base in Las Vegas. "Soft kill," she calls it. It's very powerful stuff.
Here's a section of her poem:
I have a capacity for war. I have a capacity for hate. I have a capacity for insanity. For anger. For lies. 525,600 minutes times 2, before I break into an explosion of thoughts, of insurgents and soft kills, and career moves. Capacity for destruction. Capacity for loss. Capacity for death, violence, nothingness. 24 months of pain and disgust. Actions of my hands accuse me. Guilty, charge. Unclear clear details and shaky intell, but still I pull the trigger. There’s a limit to madness. Gague clocks out at two years, but they serve up poison like entrees at Blueberry Hill. Crazy with a side of numb. It took 63,720,000 seconds to go from me to somebody else.
And check out the NEA interview with Lynn Hill, where she reflects more on her poetry and her work as a Predator Drone operator.
I
have a capacity for war. I have a capacity for hate. I have a capacity
for insanity. For anger. For lies. 525,600 minutes times 2, before I
break into an explosion of thoughts, of insurgents and soft kills, and
career moves. Capacity for destruction. Capacity for loss. Capacity for
death, violence, nothingness. 24 months of pain and disgust. Actions of
my hands accuse me. Guilty, charge. Unclear clear details and shaky
intell, but still I pull the trigger. There’s a limit to madness. Gague
clocks out at two years, but they serve up poison like entrees at
Blueberry Hill. Crazy with a side of numb. It took 63,720,000 seconds to
go from me to somebody else. To change. - See more at:
http://arts.gov/audio/lynn-hill#file_audio_default_group_audio_transcript
I
have a capacity for war. I have a capacity for hate. I have a capacity
for insanity. For anger. For lies. 525,600 minutes times 2, before I
break into an explosion of thoughts, of insurgents and soft kills, and
career moves. Capacity for destruction. Capacity for loss. Capacity for
death, violence, nothingness. 24 months of pain and disgust. Actions of
my hands accuse me. Guilty, charge. Unclear clear details and shaky
intell, but still I pull the trigger. There’s a limit to madness. Gague
clocks out at two years, but they serve up poison like entrees at
Blueberry Hill. Crazy with a side of numb. It took 63,720,000 seconds to
go from me to somebody else. To change. - See more at:
http://arts.gov/audio/lynn-hill#file_audio_default_group_audio_transcript
I
have a capacity for war. I have a capacity for hate. I have a capacity
for insanity. For anger. For lies. 525,600 minutes times 2, before I
break into an explosion of thoughts, of insurgents and soft kills, and
career moves. Capacity for destruction. Capacity for loss. Capacity for
death, violence, nothingness. 24 months of pain and disgust. Actions of
my hands accuse me. Guilty, charge. Unclear clear details and shaky
intell, but still I pull the trigger. There’s a limit to madness. Gague
clocks out at two years, but they serve up poison like entrees at
Blueberry Hill. Crazy with a side of numb. It took 63,720,000 seconds to
go from me to somebody else. To change. - See more at:
http://arts.gov/audio/lynn-hill#file_audio_default_group_audio_transcript
PS: Vijay Iyer's 2003 collaboration with Mike Ladd, In What Language?, is also terrific.
Labels:
Afghanistan,
drone,
drone strikes,
Iraq,
jazz,
poetry,
veterans,
Vijay Iyer,
war
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Orient-Institut Studies 2 (2013) - Inverted Worlds: Cultural Motion in the Arab Region
Volume 2 of Orient-Institut Studies (put out by the Orient-Institut Beirut and the Orient-Institut Istanbul) recently came out (the journal is published only online). It's the Proceedings of the Conference, "Inverted Worlds: Cultural Motion in the Arab Region," Beirut, October 4–8 2012. I've not had time to do more than skim some of the articles, but they are all about the Arab uprisings and culture. Since my main area of interest is music, I thought these essays seemed particularly interesting:
Yves Gonzalez-Quijano: Rap, an Art of Revolution or a Revolution in Art?
Nader Srage: The Protest Discourse: The Example of “Irhal” (Go/Get Out/Leave)
And there are more articles on graffiti, poetry, jokes and more. All the articles are online. Please check it out.
Yves Gonzalez-Quijano: Rap, an Art of Revolution or a Revolution in Art?
Nader Srage: The Protest Discourse: The Example of “Irhal” (Go/Get Out/Leave)
And there are more articles on graffiti, poetry, jokes and more. All the articles are online. Please check it out.
Labels:
Arab Spring,
Arab uprisings,
Egypt,
music,
protest,
rap,
revolution,
Syria,
Tunisia
Monday, September 23, 2013
more kufiyaspotting: Main Attrakionz
Main Attrakionz are a rap duo from Oakland, California,
well known players in the "cloud rap" rap subgenre.
And they seem to really like kufiyas. In all the colors.
Sunday, September 22, 2013
drone life 2: NYPD drones
In December 2012 the NYPD arrested the artist Essam Attia for posting 100 posters around the city suggesting that New York's finest were using drones to control crime. In particular, given the image, it intimates a targeting of the undocumented. (The image of the fleeing family is lifted from a warning sign developed by the California Department of Transportation to warn drivers, on I-5 north of San Diego, that illegal immigrants might be crossing.)
The posters also are riffing on a current iPod add seen around town:
Just a month after Attia was arrested, CBS News reported that the NYPD might be considering using drones in its crimefighting efforts.
A year earlier, anti-war activists in the city, led by a US army vet who had worked with drones during two tours in Iraq, were posting signs saying: “Attention, authorized drone strike zone.”
Stay tuned...
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Esther Ofarim does Scott Walker
I posted previously about Esther (born Esther Zaied, in Safad) and Abi Ofarim, their 1968 #1 hit "Cinderella Rockafella," and the fact that Esther's parents were Syrian Jews.
This is just a footnote. But a beautiful one.
It's Esther who performs Scott Walker's "Long About Now" on his 1970 album, 'Til the Band Comes In. As Dangerous Minds (where I learned about the recording) tells us, she really kills it.
Why did an Israeli singer, best known for a novelty song, do a guest vocalist on a Scott Walker album?! According to Dangerous Minds, the lyrics were just too much for him to sing. And -- his manager at the time was the Israeli Ady Semel, who also managed Esther and Abi. Strange convergence. And yet, what a result. Here's Esther doing the song live on the Rolf Harris Show in 1970. (Yeah, that Rolf Harris, who recorded "Tie Me Kangaroo Down Sport" 1959, and in 2013 was charged with child sexual assault. His show ran on BBC1 from 1967-74.)
The album, 'Til the Band Comes, was a commercial and critical flop. But as you know, Scott Walker's reputation has been growing and growing since the mid-eighties, and he is now considered an important experimental and avant-garde artist. A far cry from his pop days as part of the Walker Brothers, and this 1966 hit (the one I remember the best, as it was #1 in England -- and I lived in Lebanon and therefore it was the UK charts that we had best access to.) (Scott is on the right.)
This is just a footnote. But a beautiful one.
It's Esther who performs Scott Walker's "Long About Now" on his 1970 album, 'Til the Band Comes In. As Dangerous Minds (where I learned about the recording) tells us, she really kills it.
Why did an Israeli singer, best known for a novelty song, do a guest vocalist on a Scott Walker album?! According to Dangerous Minds, the lyrics were just too much for him to sing. And -- his manager at the time was the Israeli Ady Semel, who also managed Esther and Abi. Strange convergence. And yet, what a result. Here's Esther doing the song live on the Rolf Harris Show in 1970. (Yeah, that Rolf Harris, who recorded "Tie Me Kangaroo Down Sport" 1959, and in 2013 was charged with child sexual assault. His show ran on BBC1 from 1967-74.)
The album, 'Til the Band Comes, was a commercial and critical flop. But as you know, Scott Walker's reputation has been growing and growing since the mid-eighties, and he is now considered an important experimental and avant-garde artist. A far cry from his pop days as part of the Walker Brothers, and this 1966 hit (the one I remember the best, as it was #1 in England -- and I lived in Lebanon and therefore it was the UK charts that we had best access to.) (Scott is on the right.)
Friday, September 20, 2013
Rai rebels redux: Khaled flees homosexual-friendly France for the warm embrace of the Moroccan monarchy
Back in June, it was announced that the King of Rai, Khaled, rai's legendary "bad boy" would be decamping France for Morocco. He and his wife Samia (a Moroccan citizen) had decided do so after France legalized gay marriage, and for the sake of the proper moral education of his children.
In August, a royal decree granted Khaled Moroccan citizenship, and King Mohammed IV (towards whom the rai singer has expressed his friendship and admiration) went so far as to give Khaled a villa on the Saâdia coast.
Rebel, indeed. (See my 2010 post on Khaled here.)
In August, a royal decree granted Khaled Moroccan citizenship, and King Mohammed IV (towards whom the rai singer has expressed his friendship and admiration) went so far as to give Khaled a villa on the Saâdia coast.
Rebel, indeed. (See my 2010 post on Khaled here.)
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Andalusian music responsible for the fall of Arab Spain, says the Imam of Zeitouna mosque (Tunisia)
In fact, Cheikh Houcine Laabidi put it this way, according to Tuniscope (14 September, 2013): reckoning that the Arabs were too preoccupied by their music, he argued that malouf (the brand of Andalusian music played in Tunisia) had contributed to the fall of the Islamic state of Andalusia. It seems he was exercised by the fact that Tunisian national television had broadcast concerts by the Tunisian malouf artist Zied Gharsa.
Malouf is the 'classical' Andalusian tradition as it is done in both Tunisia and in the city of Constantine in Algeria, and it is said to originate from Seville. Cheikh Raymond Leyris was a famous Jewish Algerian malouf practitioner from Constantine.
Here is Zied Gharsa:
PS (added September 25): This post got tweeted and a gentleman from Constantine commented that malouf is played throughout the Maghreb, not just Constantine. So I should clarify: Andalusian music is played throughout the Maghreb and malouf is the name for the Tunisian and Constantine variant. Elsewhere it's known variously as hawzi, gharnati, andalusi...
Malouf is the 'classical' Andalusian tradition as it is done in both Tunisia and in the city of Constantine in Algeria, and it is said to originate from Seville. Cheikh Raymond Leyris was a famous Jewish Algerian malouf practitioner from Constantine.
Here is Zied Gharsa:
PS (added September 25): This post got tweeted and a gentleman from Constantine commented that malouf is played throughout the Maghreb, not just Constantine. So I should clarify: Andalusian music is played throughout the Maghreb and malouf is the name for the Tunisian and Constantine variant. Elsewhere it's known variously as hawzi, gharnati, andalusi...
Arabic Elements in Palestinian Yiddish
Don't you really, really want to read this book? I'm about too, soon. Amazingly, it is in the University of Arkansas library (it's part of the Kenneth L. Brown collection), and I just reserved it. If I find time, I will report back.
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Tehran Street Style
This is a lovely photo album of 'street style' in Tehran. Mostly women. If it's "street," however, it's definitely uptown and not downtown. Here's a sample.
Get this: Mutamassik's newly remastered "That Which Death Cannot Destroy." Free!
photo: Morgan Craft |
About the recording, Mutamassik sez: "It still 'cannot be bought or sold' and I'm playing all the instruments, again, as opposed to sampling ghosts of my ancestors whose names I did not even know."
Here's the link to The Wire, which will link you to the downloads.
I don't, alas, have time to review the release, but I did review her album, Masri Mokkassar: Definitive Works here.
Sunday, September 08, 2013
Battle of Algiers Mambo
If you've seen The Battle of Algiers, you of course remember the famous scenes when the two young Algerian women, dressed up to look like évoluées, plant bombs in a milk bar and a bar. The scene is based on historical fact. On September 30, 1956, the FLN militant Zohra Drif planted a bomb at the Milk Bar, which, according to Raphaël Draï (Le pays d'avant, 2008, Paris, p. 228), was one of the most popular hang-outs for young Europeans, as well as young bourgeois Arab women. Samia Lakhdari planted her bomb at L'Otomatic, the most popular student bar of Algiers.
The song playing on the jukebox, according to Draï (at L'Otomatic, I think he means, but it's not clear) was a mambo that was all the rage, from the 1954 film starring Sophia Loren, La Donna Del Fiume (known as La Fille du fleuve in French, Woman of the River in English). Draï doesn't tell us what his source is for this fact.
Perhaps it was this one, from a scene in the film which features the sultry dancing of Loren. I have not been able to identify the title or the artists.
The video identifies the song as "Mambo Bacan," but clearly that's not what it is. This is "Mambo Bacan," sung by Sophia Loren, and also from the movie soundtrack.
I've blogged previously about the song playing in the milk bar in The Battle of Algiers, when the bomb goes off. If you read the comments for the post, you will find that the song is identified as "Rebecca," and that it's by The Chakachas. You can listen here. It's a cha-cha-cha.
The song playing on the jukebox, according to Draï (at L'Otomatic, I think he means, but it's not clear) was a mambo that was all the rage, from the 1954 film starring Sophia Loren, La Donna Del Fiume (known as La Fille du fleuve in French, Woman of the River in English). Draï doesn't tell us what his source is for this fact.
Perhaps it was this one, from a scene in the film which features the sultry dancing of Loren. I have not been able to identify the title or the artists.
The video identifies the song as "Mambo Bacan," but clearly that's not what it is. This is "Mambo Bacan," sung by Sophia Loren, and also from the movie soundtrack.
I've blogged previously about the song playing in the milk bar in The Battle of Algiers, when the bomb goes off. If you read the comments for the post, you will find that the song is identified as "Rebecca," and that it's by The Chakachas. You can listen here. It's a cha-cha-cha.
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