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#Knut Berger
berg-gry · 1 year
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Diversity win! Der Nachfolger von Herr Paschulke in Löwenzahn ist gay!
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Die Darsteller [Daniel] Zillmann und [Knut] Berger haben beide bei der ActOut-Kampagne mitgewirkt, bei der sich vor rund zwei Jahren 185 queere Schauspieler*innen geoutet hatten. (x)
Hier gibt's die Folge :)
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brookstonalmanac · 11 months
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Birthdays 8.4
Beer Birthdays
Julius Deglow (1823)
William J. Seib (1836)
Rod DeWitt (1957)
Aaron Mateychuk (1965)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Louis Armstrong; jazz trumpeter, bandleader, actor (1901)
Richard Belzer; comedian, actor (1944)
Greta Gerwig; actress (1983)
Barack Obama; 44th U.S. President (1961)
William Schuman; composer (1910)
Famous Birthdays
Aleksandr Danilovich Aleksandrov; Russian mathematician, physicist, and mountaineer (1912)
Warren Avis; businessman (1915)
Béla Balázs; Hungarian poet (1844)
David Bedford; English keyboard player (1937)
George Irving Bell; physicist, biologist, and mountaineer (1926)
Henri Berger; German composer (1844)
Roger Clemens; Boston Red Sox P (1962)
Allison Hedge Coke; American-Canadian poet (1958)
Robbin Crosby; guitarist and songwriter (1959)
Gerard Damiano; film director (1928)
Don S. Davis; actor (1942)
Mary Decker; track and field athlete (1958)
Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici; Florentine patron of the arts (1463)
Michel Déon; French novelist, playwright (1919)
Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother of the UK (1900)
Herb Ellis; jazz guitarist (1921)
Frankie Ford; R&B/rock & roll singer (1939)
Witold Gombrowicz; Polish author and playwright (1904)
Jeff Gordon; race car driver (1971)
William Rowan Hamilton; Irish physicist, astronomer, and mathematician (1805)
Knut Hamsun; Norwegian writer (1859)
Robert Hayden; poet (1913)
Martin Jarvis; English actor (1941)
Cleon Jones; New York Mets LF (1942)
Johann Gottlob Lehmann; German mineralogist and geologist (1719)
Leopold I, Duke of Austria (1290)
Helen Kane; singer and actress (1904)
Lee Mack; English comedian, actor (1968)
Meghan Markle; actress (1981)
Ernesto Maserati; Italian race car driver and engineer (1898)
Paul McCarthy; painter and sculptor (1945)
John Newton; composer of “Amazing Grace” (1725)
Walter Pater; English author (1839)
Clara Peller; “Where’s the Beef” lady (1902)
David Raksin; composer (1912)
Paul Reynolds; English singer-songwriter and guitarist (1962)
Bernard Rose; English film director (1960)
Klaus Schulze; German keyboard player and songwriter (1947)
Percy Bysshe Shelley; English poet (1792)
Helen Thomas; journalist (1920)
Billy Bob Thornton; actor (1955)
John Henry Twachtman; painter (1853)
John Venn; English mathematician and philosopher (1834)
Louis Vuitton; French fashion designer (1821)
Raoul Wallenberg; Swedish humanitarian (1912)
Tim Winton; Australian author (1960)
Isoroku Yamamoto; Japanese admiral (1884)
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cinefilia2012 · 5 years
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Lalehet al hamayin (Walk on water) - 7/10
(Caminar sobre las aguas)
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sunraysandrunway · 4 years
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Eric Bergère Spring 2001 Ready-to-Wear
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(Model: Carmen Kass)
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(Model: Clara)
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(Model: Hannelore Knuts)
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drops-of-moonlights · 3 years
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talking about background characters in the discord server and listening to Belinda’s debut album spawned these lil things. 6 background characters, adapted to the AU! Two fairies (Amaryl and Ortensia), two witches (Lucrezia and Zulema) and two specialists (Jared and Karel). Bit of info below!
Amaryl Castillo, Fairy of Starlight: we all know her, the That BitchTM of Alfea. She’s in Glamourix. She’s a known rival of Stella as she does not care about the fact she’s her princess, knowing full well Stella’s not the type to use her position to put herself above others and so feels confident in being a massive asshole to her without many repercutions. Plus she just thinks the girl is annoying and egotistical and needs to be taken down some pegs. She’s mostly right on Stella not using her status, at least until Bloom and Musa appear and punched her in the face, not part of the deal. She still antagonizes Stella (as Stella does antagonize her back - it’s a weird way to show respect for the other even though they hate each other), but she is a bit more careful around the other Winx, especially once Dia joins who has no qualms with throwing her position around. Stella hates her for the same reasons Amaryl does - they’re both too similar in personality, and that makes them clash often. Her Solarian mark is a shooting star, and her Sources are Light and Sound.
Lucrezia Lazulia, Witch of Rivers: Lucrezia my beloved, she’s from comic issue 52. She’s also in Glamourix. Normally a very active bubbly woman and with lots of friends, she’s been slowly recuperating from her addiction to some performance-enchancing drugs she ended up having an overdose of during finals week the first year.  She’s been doing fine, though small relapses have happened but nothing major thanks to a strong net of friends helping her through it. Other than that, she’s known for knowing the weirdest things about Cloud Tower and everything that’s happened in it. Not the most relevant or its dirty secrets, just the weird innocuous shit. She’s from Quarzis, and her Sources are Water and Earth.
Jared Himeno, Specialist of Stones: Jared! We all know him too! The dude that had a crush on Musa in S2! rip his ass. He’s sweet and amicable but also shy as hell, and so he has a bit of trouble approaching others. He had the slight misfortune of crushing on Musa, and right when he gathered the courage to introduce herself and try to ask her out on a date he realizes Musa’s not into men, so he takes a bit of a hit to the confidence. He recovers after that but is still very awkward around Musa and Aisha because he convinced himself that the was somehow intruding in their relationship. Musa considers him a nice if weird dude and Aisha just does not register his existence much, so he overworks himself for nothing. He’s from Espero, and his Sources are Earth and Metal.
Ortensia Codatorta, Fairy of Protection: one purely background character and sometimes called Pía in canon, who was apparently Codatorta’s daughter in the Russian version of the PC game and so well, she is that too in the AU. She’s a confident and bold young woman much like her dad, but she’s a bit looser on rules and regulations and also is more prone to being accidentally tactless. She’s very close to her dad, and so distrusts Knut a bit when they start dating but they get along well soon after that. Like Codatorta, Ortensia’s from Hoggar.
Zulema Laaksonen, Witch of Fireflies: another purely background character in canon, and also the most recent, since she was introduced in S6. Zulema is a bit of a pessimist and kind of a nervous wreck, but outside of that she has a good head on her shoulders and can be incredibly good at quick thinking, which is why she chooses to ally with the Trix temporarily when they took over CT in her very first year attending. Even if it added a lot of anxiety to her everyday life until they bailed. She’s from Romulea, and her Sources are Fauna and Light.
Karel Berger, Warrior of Moonlight: and another comics character! he’s from issue 13. Karel is an alumni of Red Fountain and works with the Guild affiliated with the three schools, helping and overlooking the assignments the students do in the forest around the schools. He’s gruff and a bit dismissive of some students but he does care about their safety and just thinks they’re too inexperienced in using magic in nature and how that can be dangerous. Flora takes special issue with this anytime they have to do an assignment and he’s in charge, partly out of pride partly because she comes from Lynphea, and she knows how dangerous it is out there. He’s also a werewolf, hence his moon theme. He comes from Uncante in Magix, and his Sources are Light and Darkness.
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alatismeni-theitsa · 4 years
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Today, a Greek professor talked to me about taking his family out of Greece to somewhere where his work will be valued and his children will be financially secured.
I remembered this short movie/documentary.
It’s aimed to all people, natives and immigrants, Greeks and Germans. Knut Berger, the only German in the play, gets furious when he realized the propaganda he has been fed about the Greeks. (we love our boi) In the video the play is shown to first and second generation immigrant children in Greece.
A series of individuals from a range of generations, who split their lives between Germany and Greece, struggle to answer the question: “Should I stay or should I go?” Their life stories and personal testimonies on migration and returning to their homeland are interspersed with extracts from “The Odyssey”.
Past migrants and Gastabeiter, present-day Athenians shaken by the crisis, and specialists all talk on stage – together with Prodromos Tsinikoris, playing the role of Telemachus – about the state that Europe is in, and speak of their own personal odysseys – everything from facing down Scylla and Charybdis, to their experiences of loss and deceit, guilt and economic debt, unemployment and abnegation. In this way, Telemachus and his well-travelled companions examine the various stereotypes imposed both by our own selves and by others, and all the while confronting the present crisis.
English subs included, as always!
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reziprok · 7 years
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youtube
Trailer: NIEMANDSLAND - Schauspielhaus Graz
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hammondcast · 5 years
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Jon Hammond Show 0406
#WATCHMOVIE HERE: Jon Hammond Show 0406 Jon's archive https://archive.org/details/JonHammondShow0406
Jon Hammond Show 0406
by Jon Hammond 
Jon Hammond Show 0406 segment 1: Hamburg, Germany-- Missing Man Formation - a concert for Lutz, opener blues Auster Bar Hamburg - Musicians: Frank Delle tenor sax, Heinz Lichius drums, Joe Berger guitar, Jon Hammond organ - concert honoring our dear friend Lutz Büchner the great saxophonist in the actual same place where we last played together with Family and Friends, amazing special night. Lutz is greatly missed! We honor him in music - Jon Hammond  with fotos by master photographer Frank Siemers
#MissingMan
#LutzBüchner
#Saxophonist
#Hamburg
#Jazz
#Blues
#Honor
#Ndr
Segment 2: We gather one more time to honor Lutz Büchner, missing man formation. This song Pocket Funk was played many times by Lutz on Jon Hammond Band and right here in Auster Bar, thank you for Lutz' Family and Friends joining us on this special night - Musicians: Frank Delle tenor sax, Heinz Lichius drums, Joe Berger guitar, Jon Hammond at the Hammond Sk1 organ powered by Heinz' Markbass amp
Segment 3: Hamburg -- Besame little Snack's & more Rotherbaum - Der Ham-Berger war ganz gut belegt Heinz auch!” KARSTEN JAHNKE KONZERT DIREKTION ... Nein, es ist ein KNUT BENZNER  https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knut_Benzner KONZERT DIREKTION Produktion! Heinz Lichius - schlagzeug HH DE Joe Berger - gitarre NYC USA Jon Hammond - Hammond-Orgel NYC USA Jon Hammond Band Live-Show nur eine Nacht! little Snack ́s & more Grindelallee 180 20144 Hamburg Swinging Funky Jazz and Blues - Heinz Lichius, Jon Hammond, Joe Berger - Ham-Berger mit Heinz! - thanks Knut, Toba, Little Snack's and More Team *Note: Jon's organ and PA powered by Heinz' Markbass amp 
#Snacks
#Rotherbaum
#HammondOrgan
#Trio
Lutz' Wiki https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutz_B%C3%BCchner 
Büchner studierte an der Musikhochschule Hamburg bei Herb Geller und arbeitete dann mit dem Posaunisten Ed Kröger. Seit 1994 war er Mitglied der NDR Bigband. Zwischen 1996 und 1998 trat er in Hamburg regelmäßig mit Lucas Lindholm, Heinz Lichius und Buggy Braune und Gästen wie Wolfgang Schlüter und Gene Jackson auf. Außerdem arbeitete er mit Jörg Achim Kellers Small Bigband und mit Jürgen Attigs Low X, mit der Band von Nils Gessinger.
Von 2000 bis 2004 war Büchner Mitglied der Band von Alex Riel, mit der er das Album live at Jive (mit Carsten Dahl und Jesper Lundgaard) einspielte, Tourneen durch Dänemark, Norwegen und Vietnam unternahm und im Rolf-Liebermann-Studio des NDR auftrat. Seit 2001 war er Mitglied in der Band von Joe Gallardo, mit der er bei verschiedenen Festivals auftrat und das Album A Latin Shade of Blue aufnahm. Seit 2011 gehörte er zu Addi Münsters Old Merrytale Jazzband...
Hamburg, Missing Man, Jazz, Band, Lutz, Hammond Organ, Jon Hammond 
Publication date 2019-03-31
Usage Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Topics Hamburg, Missing Man, Jazz, Band, Lutz, Hammond Organ, Sk1, Jon Hammond, Markbass Amp, Neodymium Speaker
Language English 
Identifier JonHammondShow0406 
Jazzkeller Frankfurt
Di. 02.04. 
"The FINGERS...are the SINGERS!" Musikmesse "Warm Up Party" Jon Hammond & Band Jon Hammond - organ Joe Berger - guitar Peter Klohmann - saxophone Giovanni Gulino - drums Mr. Hammond has toured worldwide since 1991 using the incredible Sk1 organ by Hammond Suzuki..™ "Classic Hammond Sound...In A Suitcase!" The Jon Hammond Show is a funky swinging instrumental revue, featuring top international soloists. The show has universal appeal. Big Hammond orgel sound - 100% organic jonhammondband.com/music More Jon Hammond, klick: http://behindthebeat
  "The FINGERS...are the SINGERS!" Musikmesse "Warm Up Party" Jon Hammond & Band APR4 Eros 49 Frankfurt RedLight Public · Hosted by Jon Hammond Band EVENT https://www.facebook.com/events/590876024698798/ Nice sundown out of SFO It's my tune dammit - Jon Hammond 33rd consecutive year musikmesse - Frankfurt Germany Hamburg, Missing Man, Jazz, Band, Lutz, Hammond Organ, Sk1, Jon Hammond, Markbass Amp, Neodymium Speaker
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grueanno · 3 years
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Peder Johansen Askosberget
Født 1716 Døpt 8. mai 1716 Konfirmert Død Begravet
Foreldre: Johan Larsen Askosberget og Lisbet Gift: Barn:
Bosted: Askosberget 1716
Faddere: Ole Eriksen Møystad og hans kvinne Kari Olsdatter, Knut Eriksen Skjelvers kvinne Ane Engebretsdatter, Torstein Halvorsen Hornbæk, Arne Fransen Berger Forlovere:
Kilder: SAH, Grue prestekontor, Ministerialbok nr. 1, 1712-1748, s. 40-41
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blog-bishop · 6 years
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Nouvelles acquisitions (Mars 2018) Rattrapage
Dimanche 04.03.18 Boulinier Frank MacShane - Raymond Chandler - Le gentleman de Californie
Victor Hugo - Roman I - Han d'Islande, Bug-Jargal, Le dernier jour d'un condamné, Notre-Dame de Paris, Claude Gueux, Annexe : Le Bug-Jargal du conservateur Littéraire (Bouquins Robert Laffont) Victor Hugo - Théâtre II - Ruy Blas ; les Burgraves ; Torguemada ; théâtre en liberté ; les jumeaux ; mille francs de récompense ; l'intervention (Bouquins Robert Laffont) Victor Hugo - Critique - La Préface de "Cromwell". Littérature et philosophie mêlées. William Shakespeare. Proses philosophiques des années 60-65 (Bouquins Robert Laffont)
Lundi 12.03.18 Via internet Roger Blin - Souvenirs et propos recueillis par Lynda Bellity Peskine
Samedi 17.03.18 Boulinier Richard Llewellyn - Qu'elle était verte ma vallée ! Vu et aimé le film de John Ford qui m'a donné envie de jeter un œil au roman.
Samedi 24.03.18 Boulinier Daniel Gillès - Le spectateur brandebourgois J'avais adoré la bio de Gillès sur Tchékhov. Que vaut-il dans le roman ? Francis Lacassin - Pour une contre-histoire du cinéma Pierre Berger - René Char - Poètes d'aujourd'hui
Gibert Joseph Daniel Pantchenko - Léo Ferré - Sur le boulevard du crime - Au TLP-Déjazet de 1986 à 1992 Outre l'histoire du TLP-Déjazet, ce livre contient un concert inédit de Ferré ainsi que 2 entretiens du même.
Librairie Rieffel - 15, rue l’Odéon, Paris Guy de Chézal - Parachuté en Indochine - J'ai lu leur aventure Michel Borwicz - Ecrits des condamnés à mort sous l'occupation nazie Knut Hamsun - Romans (La Pochothèque)
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Contient : Faim, Mystères, Pan, Sous l'étoile d'automne, Un vagabond joue en sourdine, La Dernière Joie, Vagabonds, August le marin, Mais la vie continue D'Hamsun j'ai juste lu Mystères, dont je n'ai pas un grand souvenir, mais pas un mauvais non plus. D'après I.B. Singer, il faut lire en priorité Faim et Pan. (Voir son article éclairant dans Les cahiers de L'Herne Singer.) Hamsun a beaucoup influencé des écrivains américains, comme John Fanté ou Henry Miller. Miller raconte qu'un jour il se retrouve à la même table que Singer (auteur que Miller vénère tout autant qu'Hamsun) et il lui dit : « Vous avez lu Knut Hamsun  » Singer répond : « C'est mon écrivain préféré. » 
Jeudi 29.03.18 Via Gibert Joseph.com Gilbert Joseph - Une si douce occupation - Simone de Beauvoir et Jean-Paul Sartre 1940-1944
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On comprend  dès le début de ce livre sur Sartre et Beauvoir, que l'auteur ne porte pas le célèbre couple dans son cœur et que rien ne leur sera épargné. Sartre, d'abord. Gilbert Joseph insiste sur sa lâcheté pendant la guerre, sa manière de piquer des pointes de vitesse (sur la route, au moment de la débâcle), dès qu'il entend une détonation. Sa phobie du sang (est-ce sa faute ?), qui le rend « incapable de prêter assistance » ; sa saleté : captif dans un stalag, il vit dans sa crasse et ne se lave que forcé par ses camarades. On le surnomme « l'homme aux gants noirs » à cause de ses mains toujours sales. (tiens, tiens) Etc.
Beauvoir ensuite : hautaine, auto-centrée, d'abord paniquée par la présence de l’occupant, puis capable de faire un voyage dans un camion militaire allemand jusqu'à Paris, afin d’éviter de côtoyer un couple de Hollandais qui la révulse.
Selon l'auteur, ce qui travaille Sartre et Beauvoir, (au moment de la débâcle, elle n'a encore rien publié, mais ça n’allait pas tarder...) c'est avant tout leur œuvre et comment ils allaient pouvoir continuer à écrire sous la botte allemande. Sartre n'a jamais énoncé ses idées en public. Que pense-t-il de l'occupant ? De Vichy ? Du sort des Juifs ? On l'ignore. Alors qu'on lui propose de s'évader à plusieurs reprises du Stalag où il est retenu, il refuse. Preuve de sa lâcheté évidente, selon l'auteur, ou de sa prudence, pourrait-on dire, qui lui fait préférer l'attente à l'action. Cela fait-il de Sartre un salaud définitif ? L'auteur ne lui reconnaît qu'une seule qualité : sa faculté à écrire dans n'importe quelle circonstances. La preuve : ces manuscrits trimballés partout durant sa captivité.
Il y a tout de même l'épisode peu glorieux de la pièce que Sartre monte dans le Stalag, avec l'autorisation des allemands. Sartre choisit un sujet biblique. La pièce donne une vision caricaturale des juifs, déicides, âpres au gain, et des camarades de Sartre se rappellent la façon qu'il avait de diriger les comédiens, en leur montrant comment « jouer le juif », ce qui faisait s'esclaffer les gardiens allemands et les spectateurs antisémites. Plus tard, Sartre fait jouer ses pièces Les Mouches et Huis Clos avec la bénédiction de l’occupant. On le voit rire plaisanter en coulisses avec des nazis et cela encore le lendemain du débarquement. Alors que les combats font rage en Normandie, Sartre donne une conférence sur... le théâtre. Un mois plus tard, les services culturels allemands font encore l’éloge de Huis Clos dans leur revue.
Outre ces épisodes, on a envie de pardonner à Sartre ses petites lâchetés. Tout le monde ne peut pas être un héros, qui déciderait de résister à l'ennemi envers et contre tout, tenant un siège jusqu'à la mort, ou s'évadant de son unité avant d'être capturé par l'ennemi, afin de continuer le combat autrement. Qui sait comment on se serait comporté soi-même, sans doute pas plus bravement que Sartre. Vieille rengaine.
Ce qui est plus gênant pour l'auteur des Chemins de la liberté, c'est qu'au lieu de décrire pour le lecteur cette lâcheté banale et bien humaine, il cherche très vite à écrire sa légende et à se donner le beau rôle. Ses manuscrits qu'il trimballe dans 3 musettes contiennent l'ébauche de L'âge de raison (1ere partie des Chemins...) dans lequel il se décrit sous les traits et l'action d'un héros. Ce portrait lui sera reproché après la guerre par un des camarades de son unité. A quoi Sartre répondra que son personnage, Mathieu, n'est qu'un porte-parole, qu'il est celui qu'il aurait voulu être, c'est-à-dire : un héros. Sauf qu'il fait cet aveu en privé, et que pour le lecteur, l'identification auteur-personnage demeure trompeuse. Nadeau, qui pourtant admirait de Sartre, ne s’y trompera pas, (Voir Grâces leur soient rendues p.62 au sujet du tome 3.)
Les mensonges du couple : alors qu'il a refusé de s'évader du stalag, Sartre est finalement rapatrié pour raisons médicale (avec l'appui d'un médecin complice.) Après la guerre, Simone de Beauvoir transformera cette libération en évasion. Ensuite, le prétendu mouvement résistant de Sartre : Socialisme et Liberté... Quelques proches du couple sont enrôlés de force dans ce projet. Ils sont censés recueillir des renseignements sur l’ennemi. Leur but, c’est Sartre qui l’explique à Maurice Nadeau, qu’il rencontre à ce moment et qui lui est pleinement impliqué dans la Résistance : « Dans un an nous devrons avoir élucidé la nature de l'état édifié par Vichy. » Nadeau est sidéré. (Voir Grâces leur soient rendues p.58) Quelques temps après, Sartre dissout le groupe. Un fiasco. On a l’impression qu'il essaye de faire « quelque chose », en l’occurrence : rien, pour qu’on ne dise pas ensuite qu’il n’a rien fait du tout. Plus tard, il se décrit lui-même comme un résistant. Il prétend n'avoir jamais écrit dans le journal collabo Coemedia, alors qu'on a la trace de ses textes, et que même Simone de Beauvoir affirme qu'il a donné au moins un article avant de s'en écarter. On y lit en plus, sous sa plume un éloge de Giraudoux écrit suite à sa mort.
Après la guerre, avec l’aide de Simone de Beauvoir, Sartre n'aura de cesse de remodeler la réalité. On sent bien que la thèse principale de Gilbert Joseph est là : la façon dont le couple a réécrit sa légende après coup. Un livre donc partial par certains côtés, mais qui demeure passionnant pour comprendre ces deux personnages et saisir la complexité de l'époque. Je n'ai pas de sympathie particulière pour Sartre, dont j'ai aimé Les Mots, La Nausée, car je demeure fidèle à Léo Ferré, qui par ailleurs a soutenu le journal de Sartre, La Cause du Peuple quand il était interdit, mais qui disait de son livre sur Baudelaire : « C'est vraiment dégueulasse ! » Après lecture de ce Baudelaire par Sartre, j’ai partagé et partage encore son jugement. Ce livre ne dresse pas un portrait du géant Baudelaire mais il est une illustration de la petitesse de Sartre.
Gilbert Joseph ne fait de cadeau à personne, (Malraux est présenté comme un résistant de la dernière heure) et pas plus à Camus, qui est décrit comme un arriviste, opportuniste, lui aussi pressé de réussir à tout prix. Il ne lui pardonne pas d'avoir cédé à l'occupant en retirant un chapitre sur Kafka, dans Le Mythe de Sisyphe ou d'avoir monté sa pièce Le Malentendu avec l'autorisation de l'occupant. Ce portrait de Camus mériterait d'être nuancé, Onfray le fait dans son livre L'Ordre Libertaire.
Boulinier Peter Härtling - Dette d'amour - suivi de Zwettl, une mémoire en question
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Je trouve ce livre alors que je viens juste d'apprendre la mort récente d'Härtling (juillet 2017), auteur d'une fameuse biographie sur Hölderlin. Un article m'en apprend plus sur son enfance. A 10 ans (!) Härtling s'engage dans les jeunesses Hitlériennes, au grand désarroi de son père, hostile à Hitler. Deux ans plus tard, le père est arrêté et la mère embarque ses enfants, ils partent de Chemnitz vers l’Ouest, jusqu’à Nürtingen (comment Härtling a-t-il été arraché à la « Jungvolk », je l'ignore. Quand elle apprend que son mari est mort dans un camp russe, la mère de Peter Härtling se suicide. Le livre, raconte ces évènements. William Goldman - Les balançoires de Central Park (Father's day) Jacques Chessex - Hosanna Claude Duneton - Je suis comme une truie qui doute
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J'ai un souvenir ému de l'émission de télé que présentait Duneton vers 1987, Aléas, qui montrait des faits de société reconstitués. Les lancements des sujets par Duneton étaient vraiment étranges et décalés. Agaçantes au début, j'avais fini par apprécier ces vignettes vraiment drôles. Comment retrouver ces Aléas, aujourd'hui ? On en trouve quelques extraits sur le site de l’INA, mais hélas très souvent les lancements de Duneton sont coupés. Si quelqu'un en a conservé sur K7, je suis preneur..
Samedi 31.03.18 Boulinier Christopher Frank - Le rêve du singe fou Roland Topor - Portrait en pied de Suzanne Philippe Djian - Assassins
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tannertoctoo-blog · 7 years
Text
Untitled Document
January 11, 2017
Analysis, Vol. 76, #4, 2016 Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society, Vol. 28, #3-4, 2016 Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, Vol. 16, #4, 2016 Journal of Moral Philosophy, Vol. 14, #1, 2017 Journal of Social Philosophy, Vol. 47, #4, 2016 Juncture, Vol. 23, #3, 2016 Law & Ethics of Human Rights, Vol. 10, #2, 2016 Logic Journal of the IGPL, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 Nursing Philosophy, Vol. 18, #1, 2017 philoSOPHIA, Vol. 6, #2, 2016 Philosophy & Public Affairs, Vol. 44, #3, 2016 Phronesis, Vol. 62, #1, 2017 Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement, Vol. 78, 2016 Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement, Vol. 79, 2016 Teaching Philosophy, Vol. 39, #4, 2016
Analysis, Vol. 76, #4, 2016            Articles Clotilde Calabi. “Ancona?” Aha! That’s Her Name! Tip-of-the-Tongue Experiences. Artūrs Logins. Save the Children! Xiaoxing Zhang. Phenomenal Concepts and the Speckled Hen. Jacob Berger; Bence Nanay. Rationalism and the Unconscious Perception. William J. FitzPatrick. Misidentifying the Evolutionary Debunkers’ Error: Reply to Mogensen. Giulia Felappi. Objects of Thought? On the Usual Way Out of Prior’s Objection to the Relational Theory of Propositional Attitude Sentences. Corrigendum Adam Morton. Corrigendum. Book Symposium Michael Pelczar. Summary. Geoffrey Lee. Worlds, Voyages and Experiences: Commentary on Pelczar’s Sensorama. Eugene Mills. Introspection in Michael Pelczar’s Sensorama. Kevin Morris. Issues in Phenomenalist Metaphysics. Michael Pelczar. Replies. Recent Work Erik J. Wielenberg. Ethics and Evolutionary Theory. Critical Notices Filippo Ferrari. Assessment–Sensitivity. Naomi Osorio-Kupferblum. Aboutness. Book Reviews George Botterill. Rational Belief: Structure, Grounds and Intellectual Virtue. Katarina Perovic. The Logical Structure of Kinds, By Eric Funkhouser. Svetlana Nagumanova. The Varieties of Consciousness. Allen Thompson. Debating Procreation: Is It Wrong to Reproduce? Jonathan Wolff. How Propaganda Works. Back to Top
Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society, Vol. 28, #3-4, 2016 Original Articles Craig M. Burnett. Reconsidering the Construct Validity of “Political Knowledge”. Juliusz Jabłecki. The Financial Crisis in Retrospect: A Case of Misunderstood Interdependence. Kai Jäger. Not a New Gold Standard: Even Big Data Cannot Predict the Future. Rajiv Shah. Morgan’s Minimalism: An Epistemic Approach to Contract Law. Johan Wennström. A Left/Right Convergence on the New Public Management? The Unintended Power of Diverse Ideas. Exchange John B. Min. Politics Must Get it Right Sometimes: Reply to Muirhead. Russell Muirhead. The Epistemic Basis for Political Opposition: Rejoinder to Min. Symposium: Mark Pennington's Robust Political Economy Nick Cowen. Introduction: Symposium on Robust Political Economy. Victoria Bateman. Classical Liberalism: The Foundation for a New Economics? Michael Bennett. Experiments in Distributive Justice and Their Limits. Andrew Gamble. A Not Quite Robust Enough Political Economy. Daniel Layman. Robust Deliberative Democracy. Mark Pennington. Robust Political Economy Revisited: Response to Critics. Back to Top
Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, Vol. 16, #4, 2016 Research Articles Knut Vollebaek. Opening Address to the Tenth Anniversary Seminar of the Lund Recommendations on the Effective Participation of National Minorities in Public Life. Alan Phillips. Contribution of the Council of Europe Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities and its Advisory Committee to the Effective Participation Rights of National Minorities. Jonathan Cohen. Effective Participation of National Minorities as a Tool for Conflict Prevention. Kristin Henrard. Minorities and Socio-economic Participation: The Two Pillars of Minority Protection Revisited. Chris Chapman. The Promotion of Participation in Social, Economic and Cultural Life – NGO Strategies and Approaches. Charlotte Altenhoener. Promoting Effective Participation of National Minorities in Economic, Social and Cultural Life through Project Activities. Marc Weller. Advisory and Consultative Bodies for the Promotion of Effective Participation of National Minorities. Geoff Gilbert. The Contribution of the European Court of Human Rights to the Promotion of the Effective Participation of National Minorities: Groping in the Dark for Something that May not Be There. Joseph Marko. Effective Participation of National Minorities in Public Affairs in Light of National Case Law. Magdalena Frichova. Participation of Persons Belonging to National Minorities – Cases of Samtskhe-Javakheti and Gali. Francesco Palermo. When the Lund Recommendations are Ignored. Effective Participation of National Minorities through Territorial Autonomy. Tove H. Malloy. The Lund Recommendations and Non-Territorial Arrangements: Progressive De-territorialization of Minority Politics. Others Krzysztof Drzewicki. Ten Years of the Lund Recommendations on the Effective Participation of National Minorities in Public Life – Reflections on Progress and Unfinished Business. Editors International Journal on Minority and Group Rights. Summary of the Tenth Anniversary Seminar on the 1999 Lund Recommendations on the Effective Participation of National Minorities in Public Life. Editors International Journal on Minority and Group Rights. The Lund Recommendations on the Effective Participation of National Minorities, 1999. Editors International Journal on Minority and Group Rights. Contents of Volume 16, 2009. Back to Top
Journal of Moral Philosophy, Vol. 14, #1, 2017 Research Articles Preston Greene. Value in Very Long Lives. Aaron James. Fortune and Fairness in Global Economic Life. Avia Pasternak. Fair Play and Wrongful Benefits. Chad Vance. Climate Change, Individual Emissions, and Foreseeing Harm. Pierre Cloarec. Social Equality and the Global Society. Stephen J. White. Responsibility and the Demands of Morality. Roman Altshuler. Bootstrapping the Afterlife. Jessica Flanigan. Seat Belt Mandates and Paternalism. Joseph Heath. Climate Ethics: Justifying a Positive Social Time Preference. RJ Leland and Han van Wietmarschen. Political Liberalism and Political Community. David Miller. Fair Trade: What Does It Mean and Why Does It Matter? Justin Tosi. Playing Fair and Following the Rules. Justin Klocksiem. Two Conceptions of Justice. Thomas Nadelhoffer; Jennifer Cole Wright; Matthew Echols; Tyler Perini and Kelly Venezia. Some Varieties of Humility Worth Wanting. Kerah Gordon-Solmon. Self-Defence Against Multiple Threats. Tom O’Shea. Autonomy and Orthonomy. Jeff Sebo. Agency and Moral Status. Brian Talbot. Replaceable Lawyers and Guilty Defendants. Toby Svoboda. Why Moral Error Theorists Should Become Revisionary Moral Expressivists. Molly Gardner. On the Strength of the Reason Against Harming. Back to Top
Journal of Social Philosophy, Vol. 47, #4, 2016 Original Articles Amy Reed-Sandoval. Locating the Injustice of Undocumented Migrant Oppression. John Douglas Macready. Hannah Arendt and the Political Meaning of Human Dignity. Anna Elisabetta Galeotti. The Attribution of Responsibility to Self-Deceivers. Jason Chen. The Right to Self-Development: An Addition to the Child's Right to an Open Future. Yi Li. Testimonial Injustice without Prejudice: Considering Cases of Cognitive or Psychological Impairment. Nicolas Frank. Against Normative Consent. Back to Top
Juncture, Vol. 23, #3, 2016 Editoral Mathew Lawrence, Guy Lodge, Nick Pearce and Carys Roberts. Editorial. Feature Elizabeth Anderson, Jedediah Purdy, Samuel Moyn, Richard Yeselson, Elizabeth Bruenig, Lane Kenworthy, Joss Garman, Alan Finlayson, Julia Azari and Timothy Shenk. Obama's Legacy and Beyond. Catherine Colebrook, Laura Gardiner, Gavin Kelly, Rita Griffiths, Robert Gildea, Alex Glennie, Massoumeh Torfeh, Pierre de Vos, Silke Breimaier, Matthew Taylor, Chris Murray and Bissan Fakih. What Lies Ahead: 12 Predictions for 2017. Interview Juncture Interview: Robert Gordon. Opinion Jonathan Gray. Datafication and Democracy: Recalibrating Digital Information Systems to Address Broader Societal Interests. Essays Hugh Pemberton. US Industrial Strategy, Redux: Reinvention or Return to the 1970s? Laurie Laybourn-Langton. Barbarism at Last: A Future of Unprecedented Instability is in Plain Sight. Curtice on Politics John Curtice. Remain in Light: What do Labour's many Remain Supporters want to Happen Next? Review Yuan Yang. Review. Back to Top
Law & Ethics of Human Rights, Vol. 10, #2, 2016 Articles Avigail Eisenberg. Religion as Identity. George Letsas. Accommodating What Needn’t Be Special. Alison Mawhinney. Claims of Religious Morality: The Limits of Religious Freedom in International Human Rights Law. Neus Torbisco-Casals. Multiculturalism, Identity Claims, and Human Rights: From Politics to Courts. Patti Tamara Lenard. Fragile Trust: Muslim Communities in Canada and the R v. NS Decision. Ilenia Ruggiu. Interpreting Culture in Italian Courts: A Proposal of a “Cultural Test”. Thomas Poole. Rights and Opinion: Or, The Progress of Sentiments. Back to Top
Logic Journal of the IGPL, Vol. 25, #1, 2017        Special Issue: 8th International Conference on Computational Intelligence in Security for Information Systems (CISIS 2015). Guest Editors: Álvaro Herrero, Bruno Baruque, Javier Sedano, Héctor Quintián and Emilio Corchado Editorial Álvaro Herrero, Bruno Baruque, Javier Sedano, Hétor QuintiÀn and Emilio Corchado. Editorial: Special Issue CISIS15-IGPL. Original Articles Adam Wójtowicz and Daniel Wilusz. Architecture for Adaptable Smart Spaces Oriented on User Privacy. Iskander Sanchez-Rola, Xabier Ugarte-Pedrero, Igor Santos and Pablo G. Bringas. The Web is Watching You: A Comprehensive Review of Web-Tracking Techniques and Countermeasures. Enaitz Ezpeleta, Urko Zurutuza and José María Gómez Hidalgo. A Study of the Personalization of Spam Content using Facebook Public Information. V. Gayoso Martínez, L. Hernández Encinas, A. Martín Muñoz, M. A. Álvarez Mariño and D. Arroyo Guardeño. A Comparative Study of Three Spanish eGovernment Smart Cards. Javier Sedano, Silvia González, Camelia Chira, Álvaro Herrero, Emilio Corchado and José Ramón Villar. Key Features for the Characterization of Android Malware Families. Khoa Nguyen, Dat Tran, Wanli Ma and Dharmendra Sharma. Decision Tree Algorithms for Image Data Type Identification. Raúl Sánchez, Álvaro Herrero and Emilio Corchado. Clustering Extensions of MOVICAB-IDS to Distinguish Intrusions in Flow-Based Data. Rafał Kozik, Michał Choraś and Witold Hołubowicz. Packets Tokenization Methods for Web Layer Cyber Security. Back to Top
Nursing Philosophy, Vol. 18, #1, 2017 Special Issue: Technology, Health Care and Person centeredness Editorial Anette Forss and Christine Ceci. Technology, Health Care and Person Centeredness: Beyond Utopia and Dystopia. Thinking the Future. Original Articles Christine Ceci, Mary Ellen Purkis and Francine Wynn. Nursing with Care: A Meditation in Three Voices (In Memoriam John S. Drummond). Jeannette Pols. Good Relations with Technology: Empirical Ethics and Aesthetics in Care. Asle H. Kiran. Mediating Patienthood - From an Ethics of to an Ethics with Technology. Don Ihde. Sonifying Science: Listening to Cancer. Ruth Bartlett, Andrew Balmer and Petula Brannelly. Digital Technologies as Truth-Bearers in Health Care. Biljana Stankovic. Situated Technology in Reproductive Health Care: Do We Need a New Theory of the Subject to Promote Person-Centred Care? Aileen V. Ireland. Simulated Human Patients and Patient-Centeredness: The Uncanny Hybridity of Nursing Education, Technology and Learning to Care. Conference Report Martin Lipscomb. IPONS Conference Report 2016. Back to Top
philoSOPHIA, Vol. 6, #2, 2016 Essays Verena Erlenbusch. Foucault’s Sad Heterotopology of the Body. John Kaiser Ortiz. Gloria Anzaldúa and the Problem of Violence against Women. John McMahon. Emotional Orientations: Simone de Beauvoir and Sara Ahmed on Subjectivity and the Emotional Phenomenology of Gender. Kelly Oliver. Service Dogs: Between Animal Studies and Disability Studies. Short Cuts Aimi Hamraie. Beyond Accommodation: Disability, Feminist Philosophy, and the Design of Everyday Academic Life. Book Reviews Lisa Baraitser. Mad Mothers, Bad Mothers, and What a “Good” Mother Would Do: The Ethics of Ambivalence by Sarah LaChance Adams (review). Christopher Taylor. Postcolonial Reason and Its Critique: Deliberations on Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s Thoughts ed. by Purushottama Bilimoria, Dina Al-Kassim (review). Elizabeth Benninger. The Returns of Antigone: Interdisciplinary Essays ed. by Tina Chanter, Sean D. Kirkland (review). Carli Coetzee. Not Like a Native Speaker: On Language as a Postcolonial Experience by Rey Chow (review). Amy Ray Stewart. Head Cases: Julia Kristeva on Philosophy and Art in Depressed Times by Elaine P. Miller (review). Gayle Salamon. The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson (review). Astrida Neimanis. Gut Feminism by Elizabeth A. Wilson (review). Back to Top
Philosophy & Public Affairs, Vol. 44, #3, 2016 Original Articles Japa Pallikkathayil. Neither Perfectionism nor Political Liberalism. Justin Tosi and Brandon Warmke. Moral Grandstanding. Back to Top
Phronesis, Vol. 62, #1, 2017 Research Articles Karen Margrethe Nielsen. Vice in the Nicomachean Ethics. Emily Katz. Ontological Separation in Aristotle’s Metaphysics. Matyáš Havrda. Body and Cosmos in Galen’s Account of the Soul. Other George Boys-Stones. Late Antiquity. Back to Top
Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement, Vol. 78, 2016           Topic: History of Philosophy Papers David Sedley. An Introduction to Plato's Theory of Forms. S. Broadie. Aristotle Through Lenses from Bernard Williams. A.A. Long. What is the Matter with Matter, According to Plotinus? Brian Davies. Aquinas on What God is Not. Sarah Patterson. Descartes on the Errors of the Senses. Susan James. Why Should We Read Spinoza? Catherine Wilson. Managing Expectations: Locke on the Material Mind and Moral Mediocrity. P. J. E. Kail. Hume's ‘Manifest Contradictions’. Sebastian Gardner. Kant's Third Critique: The Project of Unification. Robert Stern. Why Hegel Now (Again) – and in What Form? Simon May. Is Nietzsche a Life-Affirmer? Michael Beaney. The Analytic Revolution. Cheryl Misak. Ramsey's Cognitivism: Truth, Ethics and the Meaning of Life. Rupert Read. Wittgenstein and the Illusion of ‘Progress’: On Real Politics and Real Philosophy in a World of Technocracy. Back to Top
Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement, Vol. 79, 2016 Topic: Museums Papers Mark O'Neill. Museums and their Paradoxes. Charles Taliaferro. The Open Museum and its Enemies: An Essay in the Philosophy of Museums. Ivan Gaskell. The Museum of Big Ideas. Michael P. Levine. Museums and the Nostalgic Self. Beth Lord. ‘A Sudden Surprise of the Soul’: Wonder in Museums and Early Modern Philosophy. David Brown. Context and Experiencing the Sacred. Paul Morrow. Are Holocaust Museums Unique? Philip Tonner. Museums, Ethics and Truth: Why Museums' Collecting Policies Must Face up to the Problem of Testimony. Andreas Pantazatos. The Ethics of Trusteeship and the Biography of Objects. Alda Rodrigues. People and Things: Questions Museums Make us Ask and Answer. Graham Oddie. What Do we See in Museums? Constantine Sandis. An Honest Display of Fakery: Replicas and the Role of Museums. Garry L. Hagberg. Word and Object: Museums and the Matter of Meaning. Anna Bergqvist. Framing Effects in Museum Narratives: Objectivity in Interpretation Revisited. Sarah Hegenbart. The Participatory Art Museum: Approached from a Philosophical Perspective. Back to Top
Teaching Philosophy, Vol. 39, #4, 2016 Articles Brian Besong. Teaching the Debate. Andrew Fisher and Jonathan Tallant. Helping Philosophy Students Become (Even More) Employable. Joel Hubick. A Philosophical Response to Plagiarism. Kathryn J. Norlock. Grading (Anxious and Silent) Participation: Assessing Student Attendance and Engagement with Short Papers on a “Question For Consideration”. Andrew J. Pierce. Interest Convergence: An Alternative to White Privilege Models of Anti-Racist Pedagogy and Practice. Reviews Timothy Chambers. Teaching Plato In Palestine: Philosophy in a Divided World, by Carlos Fraenkel. Michael Clifford. Engaging Political Philosophy: An Introduction, by Robert B. Talisse. Sam Cowling. Time: A Philosophical Introduction, by James Harrington. Dara Fogel. Lusting for Infinity: A Spiritual Odyssey, by Tom W. Boyd. Katharine Loevy. The Dimension of Difference: Space, Time and Bodies in Women’s Cinema and Continental Philosophy, by Caroline Godart. Jennifer McCrickerd. Emotions, Learning, and the Brain: Exploring the Educational Implications of Affective Neuroscience, by Mary Helen Immordino-Yang. Alan Reynolds. Philosophy, Politics, and Economics: An Anthology, edited by Jonathan Anomaly, Geoffrey Brennan, Michael Munger, and Geoffrey Sayre-McCord. Clint Tibbs. Ultimate Questions: Thinking About Philosophy, 3rd edition, by Nils Ch. Rauhut. Sarah E. Vitale. The Problems of Contemporary Philosophy: A Critical Guide for the Unaffiliated, by Paul Livingston and Andrew Cutrofello. John Philip Waterman. The Philosophy of Cognitive Science, by M. J. Cain. Timothy Yenter. Philosophy’s Artful Conversation, by D. N. Rodowick. Back to Top
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brookstonalmanac · 2 years
Text
Birthdays 8.4
Beer Birthdays
Julius Deglow (1823)
William J. Seib (1836)
Rod DeWitt (1957)
Aaron Mateychuk (1965)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Louis Armstrong; jazz trumpeter, bandleader, actor (1901)
Richard Belzer; comedian, actor (1944)
Greta Gerwig; actress (1983)
Barack Obama; 44th U.S. President (1961)
William Schuman; composer (1910)
Famous Birthdays
Aleksandr Danilovich Aleksandrov; Russian mathematician, physicist, and mountaineer (1912)
Warren Avis; businessman (1915)
Béla Balázs; Hungarian poet (1844)
David Bedford; English keyboard player (1937)
George Irving Bell; physicist, biologist, and mountaineer (1926)
Henri Berger; German composer (1844)
Roger Clemens; Boston Red Sox P (1962)
Allison Hedge Coke; American-Canadian poet (1958)
Robbin Crosby; guitarist and songwriter (1959)
Gerard Damiano; film director (1928)
Don S. Davis; actor (1942)
Mary Decker; track and field athlete (1958)
Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici; Florentine patron of the arts (1463)
Michel Déon; French novelist, playwright (1919)
Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother of the UK (1900)
Herb Ellis; jazz guitarist (1921)
Frankie Ford; R&B/rock & roll singer (1939)
Witold Gombrowicz; Polish author and playwright (1904)
Jeff Gordon; race car driver (1971)
William Rowan Hamilton; Irish physicist, astronomer, and mathematician (1805)
Knut Hamsun; Norwegian writer (1859)
Robert Hayden; poet (1913)
Martin Jarvis; English actor (1941)
Cleon Jones; New York Mets LF (1942)
Johann Gottlob Lehmann; German mineralogist and geologist (1719)
Leopold I, Duke of Austria (1290)
Helen Kane; singer and actress (1904)
Lee Mack; English comedian, actor (1968)
Meghan Markle; actress (1981)
Ernesto Maserati; Italian race car driver and engineer (1898)
Paul McCarthy; painter and sculptor (1945)
John Newton; composer of “Amazing Grace” (1725)
Walter Pater; English author (1839)
Clara Peller; “Where’s the Beef” lady (1902)
David Raksin; composer (1912)
Paul Reynolds; English singer-songwriter and guitarist (1962)
Bernard Rose; English film director (1960)
Klaus Schulze; German keyboard player and songwriter (1947)
Percy Bysshe Shelley; English poet (1792)
Helen Thomas; journalist (1920)
Billy Bob Thornton; actor (1955)
John Henry Twachtman; painter (1853)
John Venn; English mathematician and philosopher (1834)
Louis Vuitton; French fashion designer (1821)
Raoul Wallenberg; Swedish humanitarian (1912)
Tim Winton; Australian author (1960)
Isoroku Yamamoto; Japanese admiral (1884)
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emily84 · 11 years
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Lior Ashkenazi
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hammondcast · 6 years
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Jon Hammond Show recorded in Hamburg
#WATCHVIDEO HERE: Jon Hammond Show recorded in Hamburg Jon's archive https://archive.org/details/JonHammondShow0526 Usage Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International Topics Hamburg, Missing Man, Jazz, Band, Lutz, Hammond Organ, Jon Hammond Language English foto by Frank Siemers Jon Hammond Show 0623 - Just back from Germany - segment 1: Hamburg, Germany-- Missing Man Formation - a concert for Lutz, opener blues Auster Bar Hamburg - Musicians: Frank Delle tenor sax, Heinz Lichius drums, Joe Berger guitar, Jon Hammond organ - concert honoring our dear friend Lutz Büchner the great saxophonist in the actual same place where we last played together with Family and Friends, amazing special night. Lutz is greatly missed! We honor him in music - Jon Hammond with fotos by master photographer Frank Siemers #MissingMan #LutzBüchner #Saxophonist #Hamburg #Jazz #Blues #Honor #Ndr Segment 2: We gather one more time to honor Lutz Büchner, missing man formation. This song Pocket Funk was played many times by Lutz on Jon Hammond Band and right here in Auster Bar, thank you for Lutz' Family and Friends joining us on this special night - Musicians: Frank Delle tenor sax, Heinz Lichius drums, Joe Berger guitar, Jon Hammond at the Hammond Sk1 organ powered by Heinz' Markbass amp Segment 3: Hamburg -- Besame little Snack's & more Rotherbaum - Der Ham-Berger war ganz gut belegt Heinz auch!” KARSTEN JAHNKE KONZERT DIREKTION ... Nein, es ist ein KNUT BENZNER https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knut_Benzner KONZERT DIREKTION Produktion! Heinz Lichius - schlagzeug HH DE Joe Berger - gitarre NYC USA Jon Hammond - Hammond-Orgel NYC USA Jon Hammond Band Live-Show nur eine Nacht! little Snack ́s & more Grindelallee 180 20144 Hamburg Swinging Funky Jazz and Blues - Heinz Lichius, Jon Hammond, Joe Berger - Ham-Berger mit Heinz! - thanks Knut, Toba, Little Snack's and More Team *Note: Jon's organ and PA powered by Heinz' Markbass amp #Snacks #Rotherbaum #HammondOrgan #Trio Lutz' Wiki https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutz_B%C3%BCchner Büchner studierte an der Musikhochschule Hamburg bei Herb Geller und arbeitete dann mit dem Posaunisten Ed Kröger. Seit 1994 war er Mitglied der NDR Bigband. Zwischen 1996 und 1998 trat er in Hamburg regelmäßig mit Lucas Lindholm, Heinz Lichius und Buggy Braune und Gästen wie Wolfgang Schlüter und Gene Jackson auf. Außerdem arbeitete er mit Jörg Achim Kellers Small Bigband und mit Jürgen Attigs Low X, mit der Band von Nils Gessinger. Von 2000 bis 2004 war Büchner Mitglied der Band von Alex Riel, mit der er das Album live at Jive (mit Carsten Dahl und Jesper Lundgaard) einspielte, Tourneen durch Dänemark, Norwegen und Vietnam unternahm und im Rolf-Liebermann-Studio des NDR auftrat. Seit 2001 war er Mitglied in der Band von Joe Gallardo, mit der er bei verschiedenen Festivals auftrat und das Album A Latin Shade of Blue aufnahm. Seit 2011 gehörte er zu Addi Münsters Old Merrytale Jazzband... Hamburg, Missing Man, Jazz, Band, Lutz, Hammond Organ, Jon Hammond Color color Identifier JonHammondShow0526 Scanner Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.3 Sound sound Year 2018 RIP Mr. Don Donald Gardner - here in 3 hats photo with Bernard Purdie and Jon Hammond: "Don Gardner, 87, rhythm-and-blues great and head of the Philadelphia Clef Club": Hamburg, Missing Man, Jazz, Band, Lutz, Hammond Organ, Jon Hammond, Don Gardner, RIP, Hammond Organ, Blues, Jazz
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grueanno · 3 years
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Marit Hansdatter
Født Døpt Konfirmert Død Begravet
Foreldre: Hans x og ukjent Gift: før 1712 med Amund Olsen Vaaler Barn: Berger f. 1712 d. 1713; Knut f. 1714
Bosted: Vaaler 1716 Fadder for Mari Gulbrandsdatter Haukerud i 1716
Faddere: Forlovere:
Kilder: SAH, Grue prestekontor, Ministerialbok nr. 1, 1712-1748, s. 36-37
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brookstonalmanac · 3 years
Text
Birthdays 8.4
Beer Birthdays
Julius Deglow (1823)
William J. Seib (1836)
Rod DeWitt (1957)
Aaron Mateychuk (1965)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Louis Armstrong; jazz trumpeter, bandleader, actor (1901)
Richard Belzer; comedian, actor (1944)
Greta Gerwig; actress (1983)
Barack Obama; 44th U.S. President (1961)
William Schuman; composer (1910)
Famous Birthdays
Aleksandr Danilovich Aleksandrov; Russian mathematician, physicist, and mountaineer (1912)
Warren Avis; businessman (1915)
Béla Balázs; Hungarian poet (1844)
David Bedford; English keyboard player (1937)
George Irving Bell; physicist, biologist, and mountaineer (1926)
Henri Berger; German composer (1844)
Roger Clemens; Boston Red Sox P (1962)
Allison Hedge Coke; American-Canadian poet (1958)
Robbin Crosby; guitarist and songwriter (1959)
Gerard Damiano; film director (1928)
Don S. Davis; actor (1942)
Mary Decker; track and field athlete (1958)
Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici; Florentine patron of the arts (1463)
Michel Déon; French novelist, playwright (1919)
Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother of the UK (1900)
Herb Ellis; jazz guitarist (1921)
Frankie Ford; R&B/rock & roll singer (1939)
Witold Gombrowicz; Polish author and playwright (1904)
Jeff Gordon; race car driver (1971)
William Rowan Hamilton; Irish physicist, astronomer, and mathematician (1805)
Knut Hamsun; Norwegian writer (1859)
Robert Hayden; poet (1913)
Martin Jarvis; English actor (1941)
Cleon Jones; New York Mets LF (1942)
Johann Gottlob Lehmann; German mineralogist and geologist (1719)
Leopold I, Duke of Austria (1290)
Helen Kane; singer and actress (1904)
Lee Mack; English comedian, actor (1968)
Meghan Markle; actress (1981)
Ernesto Maserati; Italian race car driver and engineer (1898)
Paul McCarthy; painter and sculptor (1945)
John Newton; composer of “Amazing Grace” (1725)
Walter Pater; English author (1839)
Clara Peller; “Where’s the Beef” lady (1902)
David Raksin; composer (1912)
Paul Reynolds; English singer-songwriter and guitarist (1962)
Bernard Rose; English film director (1960)
Klaus Schulze; German keyboard player and songwriter (1947)
Percy Bysshe Shelley; English poet (1792)
Helen Thomas; journalist (1920)
Billy Bob Thornton; actor (1955)
John Henry Twachtman; painter (1853)
John Venn; English mathematician and philosopher (1834)
Louis Vuitton; French fashion designer (1821)
Raoul Wallenberg; Swedish humanitarian (1912)
Tim Winton; Australian author (1960)
Isoroku Yamamoto; Japanese admiral (1884)
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