As the Village Voice puts it: “In 2004, there were “The Gates”. And in 2008, there were “The Waterfalls”. And now, in 2010, there will be THE STREET PIANOS!’” Pianos, along with their accompanying pianists, will be hitting the streets of NYC this summer in a new public art exhibit called “Play Me, I’m Yours.” [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Alicia Keys, Birmingham, England, Jerry Lee Lewis, Luke Jerram, Piano, Public art, times square
This neon denizen of the night was exceptionally and brilliantly charged at this year’s Greenwich Village Parade. Within the afterglow of an equally dazzling geisha girl (or babe), he symbolizes the electrifying pulse of this city in his own peculiar way; the touching pathos of romance forever walking along the outer limits of bathos and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Arts, England, Greenwich, Greenwich Village, literature, London, Outdoors, Recreation
Used by Permission/ Courtesy: MStreeter, AAEC Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comments (4) Article tags: Asia, Business, Business and Economy, Dealers, England, guitars, Japan, legend, Les-Paul, Motoring, music, Used
Yesterday, the Ed Sullivan Theatre was rocked alive with the sound of music and Paul [now Sir] McCartney. Over 45 years ago, Beatlemania was born in this very theatre when Sullivan introduced McCartney (along with John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr) and the Beatles to America. What was planned as a surprise quickly became [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Abbey Road Studios, Beatles, David Letterman, England, George Harrison, John Lennon, music, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, theatre
In 1918, at the New York Hippodrome, legendary magician and escape artist Harry Houdini made an 8- foot, 6,000 pound elephant disappear. A crowd of over 5,000 packed the auditorium to watch Houdini’s latest stunt: the “world’s most incredible” conjuring illusion. The pachyderm would proudly and graciously appear upon Houdini’s introduction, with a raising of [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: England, entertainment, Harry Houdini, historic, Jennie, Jim Steinmeyer, legend, Magic, Mail Online, Morritt, New York Hippodrome, theatre
Four centuries ago, when England erupted in Civil War, Christmas was in a sorry state. In 1644, the victorious Puritan faction outlined its numerous and fundamentalist decrees by completely banning the holiday. They saw Christmas as a solemn, pious occasion and opposed the drunken debauchery and revelries that, in their opinion, had distorted its religious [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: christmas, England, food, historic, holiday, inventions, Jacob Marley, Nativity of Jesus, politics, Quendon, Roman Catholic Church, Saffron Walden, William Winstanley
When I was a child, growing up in the wilds of Brooklyn, pudding was synonymous with My*T*Fine Pudding; since 1918, the “premium cook-n-serve pudding” for many Americans. Directions: stir 4 cups of milk into the mix, heat on a medium flame until the mixture thickens, pour the bubbly brew into serving dishes, allow to cool [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: christmas, Christmas Eve, Christmas pudding, Dried fruit, England, food, historic, holiday, personal, Victorian era
Wonders never cease in my tiresomely fashionable Park Slope, Brooklyn neighborhood. Little surprise they “clepe us” liberals and gentrified-beings (which, I interpret, means post-yuppies living in a state of suspended post-modernism) and with “swinish phrase” soil our routine pretensions, making us “traduced and taxed” of other neighborhoods. (My apologies to Hamlet. Like him, verbose speculator [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: ads, art, Barack Obama presidential campaign 2008, barack-obama, brooklyn, England, Park Slope, Park Slope Brooklyn, Planned Parenthood, politics, sarah-palin, Shepard Fairey, United States
For anyone who thought (or was hoping) that Peter Frampton was dead, he’s certainly not. The Brooklyn Paper is reporting that the man behind the “talking six string” and accompanying wah-wah pedals, guitar jams and the like, will be performing at the Seaside Summer Concert Series on July 31 in Coney Island. The concert is [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: brooklyn, Brooklyn Paper, coney-island, disco, England, Frampton Comes Alive!, Grace Slick, Jefferson Starship, legend, Marty Balin, music, outdoor music, Peter Frampton, summer
“The British Royal Air Force Red Arrows flying team soared past the Statue of Liberty a few days before England’s former colony celebrated its 232nd year of independence from the motherland.” Tom Callan, The Brooklyn Paper brooklynpaper.com/stories/31/26/… Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: Air Force, England, Government, History, holiday, Military, raf, Royal Air Force, statue of liberty, United States
An acetylene flame rippling through the steel-edged membranes dissolve-in the slag-encrusted cellophane of the deep, hardened saffron refrain. Technorati Profile Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comment (1) Article tags: Asia, Business, Business and Economy, England, Jimmy Choo, poetry, Postings, Saffron, thoughts, Ukraine