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This is a list of things/songs/tweets I have found/been shown recently, that haven’t fallen into specific blog posts. I suppose if I ever had a newsletter it would probably be something like this. I was doing this regularly and then stopped so this is just since the start of the year.

There’s more after the jump…

Scaffold Light
See how the light playfully dances onto the terrace through the scaffold. Alas, their view of the sunrise will soon be lost. 🌅 😔

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2017 Review: Music

Here are some of the highlights of the music I listened to the most in 2017.

There’s a full playlist of the tracks I listen to the most here, and a playlist of all the songs I was recommended/found/started listening to in 2017 here.

As always I keep a rolling playlist of stuff I’m listening to at the moment update nearly daily here.

Deadcrush by Alt-J

Melatonin by A Tribe Called Quest

To Be A Young Man by Nadine Shah

Off You by The Breeders

We Can Talk by The Band

Iron Sky by Paolo Nutini

Girl by The Internet

I Give You Power by Arcade Fire and Mavis Staples

The Heart Part 4 by Kendrick Lamar

Shark Smile by Big Thief

The Wheel by PJ Harvey

Redbone by Childish Gambino

How Long by The Pointer Sisters

Dolphins by Fred Neal

Aggrophobe by PINS, Iggy Pop

Situation by Margaret Glaspy

Rapt by Karen O

All About Me by Syd

Open Eye Signal by Jon Hopkins

See also what I watched and read in 2017.

Coltrane’s Circle of Fifths

From Open Culture:

Physicist and saxophonist Stephon Alexander has argued in his many public lectures and his book The Jazz of Physics that Albert Einstein and John Coltrane had quite a lot in common. Alexander in particular draws our attention to the so-called “Coltrane circle,” which resembles what any musician will recognize as the “Circle of Fifths,” but incorporates Coltrane’s own innovations. Coltrane gave the drawing to saxophonist and professor Yusef Lateef in 1967, who included it in his seminal text, Repository of Scales and Melodic Patterns. Where Lateef, as he writes in his autobiography, sees Coltrane’s music as a “spiritual journey” that “embraced the concerns of a rich tradition of autophysiopsychic music,” Alexander sees “the same geometric principle that motivated Einstein’s” quantum theory.

Neither description seems out of place. Musician and blogger Roel Hollander notes, “Thelonious Monk once said ‘All musicians are subconsciously mathematicians.’ Musicians like John Coltrane though have been very much aware of the mathematics of music and consciously applied it to his works.”

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We’ve been away and I have been keeping of the internet to a degree (it always catches up with you though) so I have drawings and things all backed up and out of sequence.

This still works thought, the assembly is automatic from my bookmarking and music listening so it just takes a bit of finessing and it’s ready to go.

This is working for me now in a way that Tumblr used to.

The image is of the railway line at Collumpton Services where we stopped on the way back from Cornwall.

Be warned there’s a lot of politics this time but it’s been difficult to avoid.

Some things have to be said.

 

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Here’s a round up of links and culture from  the last week. As ever I’m always debating whether I should share links and finds one by one like a Tumblr or just put them all in one post in a more of a newsletter type format, like this, often coming to the conclusion that this way is less annoying for the reader, in that it’s more easy to ignore in one go.

I want to blog more. This is me blogging more.

The above moving image was auto-generated for me by Google Photos.

It begins after the break.

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