#jason kesselring
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cometsovcupid · 2 months ago
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New Comets Ov Cupid review in Audion Magazine! Issue 80
Very honored to have review of new Comets Ov Cupid of album Eros 433 in the magazine Audion! A magazine dedicated to all things experimental cosmic and psychedelic in music. Check it out and pick up an Issue! Lots of great stuff! See review below! “Comets Ov Cupid EROS 433 (Space Rock Recordings) 2LP/DL 60m Comets Ov Cupid is the multi-instrumental solo project of one Jason Kesselring from Devils…
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goalhofer · 10 months ago
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2023-24 1st NHL Goals
October 11, 2023
Connor Bedard (Chicago) at Boston.
October 12, 2023
Brock Faber (Minnesota) vs. Florida.
October 14, 2023
Will Cuylle (New York Rangers) at Columbus.
David Jiříček (Columbus) vs. New York Rangers.
Matthew Coronato (Calgary) at Pittsburgh.
Marco Rossi (Minnesota) at Toronto.
Thomas Bordeleau (San José) vs. Colorado.
October 15, 2023
Pavel Mintyukov (Anaheim) vs. Carolina.
October 16, 2023
Matthew Phillips (Washington) vs. Calgary.
October 17, 2023
Yegor Zamula (Philadelphia) vs. Vancouver.
October 19, 2023
Leo Carlsson (Anaheim) vs. Dallas.
October 21, 2023
Adam Fantilli (Columbus) at Minnesota.
Alex Laferriere (Los Angeles) vs. Boston.
October 22, 2023
Matt Poitras (Boston) at Anaheim.
October 30, 2023
Dmitri Voronkov (Columbus) at Dallas.
October 31, 2023
Andreas Englund (Los Angeles) at Toronto.
November 1, 2023
Brandon Biro (Buffalo) at Philadelphia.
Connor Zary (Calgary) vs. Dallas.
Logan Cooley (Arizona) at Anaheim.
November 4, 2023
Martin Pospíšil (Calgary) at Seattle.
November 6, 2023
Johnny Beecher (Boston) at Dallas.
Mason Lohrei (Boston) at Dallas.
November 9, 2023
Kevin Korchinski (Chicago) at Tampa Bay.
November 10, 2023
Uvis Balinskis (Florida) vs. Carolina.
November 18, 2023
James Hamblin (Edmonton) at Tampa Bay.
November 22, 2023
Zach Benson (Buffalo) at Washington.
November 24, 2023
Spencer Stastney (Nashville) at St. Louis.
November 30, 2023
Tristan Jarry (Pittsburgh) at Tampa Bay.
Tristan Luneau (Anaheim) vs. Washington.
December 7, 2023
Šimon Nemec (New Jersey) at Seattle.
December 9, 2023
Jayden Struble (Montreal) at Buffalo.
December 11, 2023
Michael Kesselring (Arizona) at Buffalo.
December 13, 2023
Sam Malinski (Colorado) vs. Buffalo.
December 15, 2023
Adam Edström (New York Rangers) vs. Anaheim.
December 16, 2023
Bobby McMann (Toronto) vs. Pittsburgh.
December 19, 2023
Angus Crookshank (Ottawa) at Arizona.
December 21, 2023
Nick DeSimone (Calgary) at Anaheim.
December 27, 2023
Valtteri Puustinen (Pittsburgh) at New York Islanders.
January 5, 2024
Vasili Ponomaryov (Carolina) at Washington.
January 9, 2024
Henry Thrun (San José) at Toronto.
January 16, 2024
Jason Polin (Colorado) at Ottawa.
January 17, 2024
Joshua Roy (Montreal) at New Jersey.
January 20, 2024
Jackson LaCombe (Anaheim) at San José.
Brendan Brisson (Vegas) vs. Pittsburgh.
January 23, 2024
Sheldon Rempal (Vegas) at New York Islanders.
January 25, 2024
Mitchell Chaffee (Tampa Bay) vs. Arizona.
January 31, 2024
Alex Turcotte (Los Angeles) at Nashville.
February 6, 2024
Kyle MacLean (New York Islanders) at Toronto.
February 13, 2024
Brandon Gignac (Montreal) vs. Anaheim.
February 14, 2024
John Ludvig (Pittsburgh) vs. Florida.
February 17, 2024
Brandt Clarke (Los Angeles) at Boston.
Declan Chisholm (Minnesota) vs. Buffalo.
February 19, 2024
Justin Brazeau (Boston) vs. Dallas.
Mason Morelli (Vegas) at San José.
February 24, 2024
Zachary Bolduc (St. Louis) at Detroit.
Matt Rempe (New York Rangers) at Philadelphia.
February 26, 2024
Logan Stankoven (Dallas) vs. New York Islanders.
March 2, 2024
Jonathan Gruden (Pittsburgh) at Calgary.
March 6, 2024
Jean-Luc Foudy (Colorado) vs. Detroit.
March 7, 2024
Ivan Miroshnichenko (Washington) at Pittsburgh.
Jacob Moverare (Los Angeles) vs. Ottawa.
March 22, 2024
Ryker Evans (Seattle) at Arizona.
March 26, 2024
Josh Doan (Arizona) vs. Columbus.
March 31, 2024
Olen Zellweger (Anaheim) at Vancouver.
April 4, 2024
Ryan Shea (Pittsburgh) at Washington.
Akil Thomas (Los Angeles) at San José.
April 6, 2024
Adam Ginning (Philadelphia) at Columbus.
Olle Lycksell (Philadelphia) at Columbus.
April 7, 2024
Matt Kessel (St. Louis) at Anaheim.
April 10, 2024
Landon Slaggert (Chicago) at St. Louis.
April 12, 2024
Sam Colangelo (Anaheim) vs. Calgary.
Marat Khusnutdinov (Minnesota) at Vegas.
April 13, 2024
James Malatesta (Columbus) at Nashville.
Liam Öhgren (Minnesota) at San José.
April 14, 2024
Frank Nazar III (Chicago) vs. Carolina.
April 16, 2024
Jiří Smejkal (Ottawa) at Boston.
Luca Del Bel Belluz (Columbus) vs. Carolina.
April 18, 2024
Nikita Chibrikov (Winnipeg) vs. Vancouver.
Adam Klapka (Calgary) vs. San José.
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news24fresh · 5 years ago
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Bang & Olufsen partners with Xbox to elevate gaming audio experience
Bang & Olufsen partners with Xbox to elevate gaming audio experience
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Xbox has added a touch of luxury to its extensive gaming partnership for 2020, by partnering with Danish luxury audio-visual technology brand Bang & Olufsen (B&O). This new collaboration, according to a B&O company statement, “will create a new audio proposition to cater for the high-end segment within gaming by leveraging on B&O’s core capabilities of sound, design and craft. This will…
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fromthe-point · 5 years ago
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BOSTON —Northeastern Fernie Flaman Men's Hockey Coach Jim Madigan announced Monday that Craig Pantano and Brendan van Riemsdyk will join the Huskies for the 2019-20 season as graduate transfers. The duo arrives on Huntington Avenue after playing three seasons at Merrimack and New Hampshire, respectively. Pantano and van Riemsdyk join an incoming class of 12 for the Huskies, including Jeremie Bucheler, Matt DeMelis, Riley Hughes, Mike Kesselring, Aidan McDonough, Alex Mella, Connor Murphy, Neil Shea, Tyler Spott and TJ Walsh. "We're excited to announce a brand new class coming to the Northeastern men's ice hockey program for this fall," Madigan said. "This is the hard work of Jerry Keefe and Jason Smith during the course of the last 1-2 years attracting such a wonderful class of young men who have high character and who are real good hockey players who will contribute to our success immediately." "We lost some goal scorers and some playmakers, along with some gritty two-way wingers, and I think we've addressed that with this year's class. As I said our staff did a tremendous job bringing in high-level talent to our program that will allow us to continue competing at the highest level in Hockey East and allow us to compete at the national level."
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larryland · 8 years ago
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“Arsenic”—Old Hat?
by Barbara Waldinger
Can this 1941 farcical black comedy still amuse an audience in 2017?  You bet–check out Berkshire Theatre Group’s production of Arsenic and Old Lace on The Fitzpatrick Main Stage.  If its initial pre-war audience craved an escapist entertainment, perhaps we too might be grateful to enjoy a good laugh and avoid today’s headlines.  Joseph Kesselring’s fast-paced story of crazies and murderous misfits appears in the nick of time.
The plot, you may recall, concerns the Brewster sisters (Harriet Harris and Mia Dillon)—two sweet, charitable old ladies who take it upon themselves to poison lonely, aged, unattached males in order to put them out of their misery.  Their visiting nephew Mortimer (Graham Rowat), upon learning to his horror that a dozen men are buried in the cellar, determines to save his aunts from prosecution.  The play is, believe it or not, fact-based.  Beginning in 1907, one Amy Archer-Gilligan operated a convalescent home in Windsor, Connecticut.  Residents, including a couple of her husbands, began disappearing after Archer-Gilligan convinced them to pay a flat fee of $1,000 to cover expenses incurred during their lifetime (which didn’t last very long).  Investigations of no fewer than 48 deaths in a four-year period produced evidence of poison.  A gruesome tale, but Kesselring decided to give it a comic twist after a nudge from his producers.
Arsenic and Old Lace was an immediate hit, running on Broadway from 1941 to 1944, and its success had interesting ramifications.  A film version, directed by Frank Capra and starring Cary Grant, was shot in 1941 but its release was delayed until the Broadway run finally ended three years later. Capra had wanted Boris Karloff to repeat his Broadway role in the film (Jonathan Brewster, Mortimer’s brother), but the producers wouldn’t allow him to leave the stage production.  Capra had to settle for Raymond Massey, who was then made up to look like Boris Karloff.  In Kesselring’s play, the homicidal Jonathan had undertaken to disguise his identity, but the surgery, performed by his drunk, incompetent accomplice, was botched and he was turned into a Karloff look-alike.  Even without Karloff, the movie was immensely popular.
Translated into many languages and performed throughout the world in theatrical, film, and television versions, this play has always been a favorite of community theatres.
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But professional theatres, at least in the Berkshires, have not turned to this old chestnut recently.  Berkshire Theatre Group’s Artistic Director Kate Maguire has taken it on, and turned it over to Gregg Edelman, who encouraged his actors to broaden the comedy into over-the-top farce.  In this, he followed Frank Capra.  Cary Grant believed his performance as Mortimer was one of his worst, complaining:  “I couldn’t do that kind of comedy—all those double takes. I’d have been better as one of the old aunts!”  Yet Graham Rowat excels in his role as Mortimer here.  He plays a fast-talking, fast-walking, double-taking drama critic who hates the theatre.   Whenever he is onstage we are swept up in the urgency of his mission.  Mia Dillon and especially Harriet Harris perfectly capture the unawareness of the sisters who don’t see that they’ve done anything wrong, as they proudly describe how they poison their victims and use their batty nephew Teddy (Timothy Gulan), who believes he’s Theodore Roosevelt, to dig their graves in what he imagines are the locks of the Panama Canal (actually, the cellar).  Wonderful performances, both.  Gulan, incredibly energetic, repeatedly blows his bugle and screams “CHARGE!” as he runs up San Juan Hill (the staircase).  The most lovable aspect of his performance is the way he expects and receives the respect due to a president.  The third nephew, Jonathan (Matt Sullivan), the creepiest of the eccentrics, engages with his aunts in a competition to see who has killed the most people.  He provides the scariest moments of the play, while his long-suffering comic sidekick, the German Dr. Einstein (Tom Story—well-played) just wants to lead a stable, normal life.  Gerry McIntyre, who plays a police officer dreaming of being a playwright, brings enthusiasm and a dancer’s physicality to this improbable cop.  Katie Birenboim, as Elaine Harper, one of the few rational characters, plays the “straight man” to her fiancé, Mortimer.  Although she exhibits admirable spunk, she has a disconcerting habit of speaking out to the audience, regardless of whom she is addressing.
The finely detailed old Brewster home (designed by Randall Parsons) is said to have been modeled on a boarding house where Kesselring lived while teaching at Bethel College in Kansas.  The Brooklyn living room is mostly brown with blue trim, filled with feminine touches—curtains on all of the windows, a lovely blue and gold tablecloth, many old photos, one of which happens to be a portrait of Amy Archer-Gilligan (!), and the all-important window seat with a pull-up cover recessed below two tall windows.  Sound designer Scott Killian supplies period songs but his most amusing contribution is the organ music that signals frightening events to follow.  Costume designer (Hunter Kaczorowski) dresses all of the characters in appropriate clothing but the most interesting outfits are worn by Gulan as Theodore Roosevelt (at one point he wears two hats for an African safari).  Lighting designer Alan Edwards adds to the macabre atmosphere, enabling us to see what the characters are up to, even in semi-darkness.
The play is long:  by the third act, after two intermissions it can get a bit tedious. There are 14 characters, some of whom could have been excised without sacrificing the essential plot.  However, like a fireworks display, enough colorful personalities are thrown in to keep the action going.  With strong performances and capable direction, Arsenic and Old Lace can still elicit laughter after all these years.
Arsenic and Old Lace runs from July 27—August 19 at the Berkshire Theatre Group’s Fitzpatrick Main Stage.  For tickets call 413-997-4444 or online at berkshiretheatregroup.org.
Berkshire Theatre Group presents Arsenic and Old Lace.  Cast:  Katie Birenboim (Elaine Harper), Ryan Chittaphong (Officer Klein), Mia Dillon (Martha Brewster), Timothy Gulan (Teddy Brewster), Harriet Harris (Abby Brewster), Walter Hudson (Mr. Gibbs/Mr. Witherspoon), Gerry McIntyre (Officer O’Hara), Graham Rowat (Mortimer Brewster), Tom Story (Dr. Einstein), Matt Sullivan (Jonathan Brewster), Michael Sullivan (Officer Brophy), Walton Wilson (The Rev. Dr. Harper/Lieutenant Rooney).  Director:  Gregg Edelman, Scenic Designer:  Randall Parsons, Costume Designer:  Hunter Kaczorowski, Lighting Designer:  Alan Edwards, Sound Designer:  Scott Killian, Wig Designer:  J. Jared Janas, Stage Manager:  Jason Weixelman.  Running Time:  2 hours 30 minutes including two intermissions; at Berkshire Theatre Group’s Fitzpatrick Main Stage, 83 East Main Street, Stockbridge, MA., from July 27; closing August 19.
REVIEW: “Arsenic and Old Lace” in Stockbridge “Arsenic”—Old Hat? by Barbara Waldinger Can this 1941 farcical black comedy still amuse an audience in 2017? 
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comets-ov-cupid · 7 years ago
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New Comets Ov Cupid Track!!! #2 in a 9 part cosmic music series 2nd in a 9 part series of Space Music Singles This my Theme to an Imaginary Space Western. Guitars and Keyboards: Jason Kesselring https://cometsovcupid.bandcamp.com/track/comet-tales-ii #cometsovcupid #spacerock #spacemusic #minneapolis #spaceexploration
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kristablogs · 5 years ago
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Why fighter jets are flying over New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania today
Thunderbirds F-16s earlier this month in Colorado. (Airman 1st Class Nilsa E. Garcia / US Air Force/)
If you live in the New York City or Philadelphia area, you might see—or hear—fighter jets tearing through the sky today. The aircraft are F-16s and F/A-18s, flown by the Thunderbirds and Blue Angels, the Air Force and Navy aerial demonstrations teams.
The purpose of the flights is a chance “to salute those working on the frontline of the COVID-19 response,” the Blue Angels’ commander Brian Kesselring said in a statement.
The supersonic-capable F-16s are known casually as “vipers,” and the Thunderbirds aircraft are painted red, white, and blue. Vipers are a classic dogfighter that have been flying since the late 1970s—in fact, the first time one lifted off the ground, in 1974, was an accident. These agile swept-wing planes, and the pilots in them, can sustain some 9 Gs of force during sharp turns and other maneuvers; the aircraft can also be mid-air refueled as needed.
While some planes, like the 747, have a control system that relies on internal physical cables as the connectors between the pilot’s controls and the aircraft’s external movable surfaces, so that it can execute maneuvers like turning, these fighter jets are what’s known as fly-by-wire. The pilot uses a pressure-sensitive stick to tell the jet what to do, and then four onboard flight computers carry out the request. "The stick doesn’t move more than about a quarter inch,” Maj. Jason Markzon, a pilot with the Thunderbirds, told me before he took me up for a brutal and dramatic flight last year.
The Thunderbirds—who, like the Blue Angels, typically perform at air shows—will be flying in a delta, or triangle, formation of six planes. They’ll also have a seventh plane with them, an F-16D, which has two seats in a tandem setup. The front seat is for the pilot, and the back, which also has flight controls, is where an aerial photographer will sit.
Meanwhile, the Blue Angels rocket around in a different type of plane: F/A-18s. Those are called Hornets, and they can take off and land from aircraft carriers, something the viper cannot. The aircraft that the Navy flies for this team are specifically F/A-18 C and D models. The C-variant holds just one person, while the D has seats for two. Unlike the F-16s with their viper nickname, these jets don’t have a fun sobriquet—they’re just called Hornets. However, the newest and biggest F/A-18s variants are called Super Hornets, and their nickname is “the rhino.”
Blue Angel F/A-18 Hornets in Sept., 2019. (Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jasmine Suarez / US Navy /)
Besides the fact that the Blue Angels are painted, well, blue, you’ll be able to notice another difference between them and the Thunderbirds: the F/A-18 Hornets have two vertical tail fins in the back to match their twin-engines. Vipers are a little simpler-looking—one engine, one vertical tail fin.
Like the Thunderbirds, the Blue Angels will be flying in a delta formation of six planes, with a seventh two-seater plane up there, too. All told, there should be 14 fighter jets in the sky. The Air Force and the Navy say that more of these flights over additional cities will be happening over the “coming weeks.” (For a critical take on the operations, check out this post on the military-focused site Task & Purpose.)
If you want to try to catch a glimpse of them in the New York area, their schedule has them crossing near the George Washington Bridge at noon, then circling over Newark, New Jersey, and then winging back over towards Brooklyn and Queens. The sortie finishes with a leg back northwards towards Connecticut, then over White Plains, NY, then down south over the Bronx and past Manhattan’s east side.
Later in the day, the two teams will fly over the Trenton, NJ area after they depart from a military base near that city at about 1:45 pm. They’ll make a series of turns, then cruise to Philadelphia at about 1:55 pm. The fly-over should end at 2:15 pm.
Maps of the planned routes are below.
The planned flight route for New York and New Jersey. (US Air Force /) The route for New Jersey and Pennsylvania. (US Air Force/)
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scootoaster · 5 years ago
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Why fighter jets are flying over New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania today
Thunderbirds F-16s earlier this month in Colorado. (Airman 1st Class Nilsa E. Garcia / US Air Force/)
If you live in the New York City or Philadelphia area, you might see—or hear—fighter jets tearing through the sky today. The aircraft are F-16s and F/A-18s, flown by the Thunderbirds and Blue Angels, the Air Force and Navy aerial demonstrations teams.
The purpose of the flights is a chance “to salute those working on the frontline of the COVID-19 response,” the Blue Angels’ commander Brian Kesselring said in a statement.
The supersonic-capable F-16s are known casually as “vipers,” and the Thunderbirds aircraft are painted red, white, and blue. Vipers are a classic dogfighter that have been flying since the late 1970s—in fact, the first time one lifted off the ground, in 1974, was an accident. These agile swept-wing planes, and the pilots in them, can sustain some 9 Gs of force during sharp turns and other maneuvers; the aircraft can also be mid-air refueled as needed.
While some planes, like the 747, have a control system that relies on internal physical cables as the connectors between the pilot’s controls and the aircraft’s external movable surfaces, so that it can execute maneuvers like turning, these fighter jets are what’s known as fly-by-wire. The pilot uses a pressure-sensitive stick to tell the jet what to do, and then four onboard flight computers carry out the request. "The stick doesn’t move more than about a quarter inch,” Maj. Jason Markzon, a pilot with the Thunderbirds, told me before he took me up for a brutal and dramatic flight last year.
The Thunderbirds—who, like the Blue Angels, typically perform at air shows—will be flying in a delta, or triangle, formation of six planes. They’ll also have a seventh plane with them, an F-16D, which has two seats in a tandem setup. The front seat is for the pilot, and the back, which also has flight controls, is where an aerial photographer will sit.
Meanwhile, the Blue Angels rocket around in a different type of plane: F/A-18s. Those are called Hornets, and they can take off and land from aircraft carriers, something the viper cannot. The aircraft that the Navy flies for this team are specifically F/A-18 C and D models. The C-variant holds just one person, while the D has seats for two. Unlike the F-16s with their viper nickname, these jets don’t have a fun sobriquet—they’re just called Hornets. However, the newest and biggest F/A-18s variants are called Super Hornets, and their nickname is “the rhino.”
Blue Angel F/A-18 Hornets in Sept., 2019. (Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jasmine Suarez / US Navy /)
Besides the fact that the Blue Angels are painted, well, blue, you’ll be able to notice another difference between them and the Thunderbirds: the F/A-18 Hornets have two vertical tail fins in the back to match their twin-engines. Vipers are a little simpler-looking—one engine, one vertical tail fin.
Like the Thunderbirds, the Blue Angels will be flying in a delta formation of six planes, with a seventh two-seater plane up there, too. All told, there should be 14 fighter jets in the sky. The Air Force and the Navy say that more of these flights over additional cities will be happening over the “coming weeks.” (For a critical take on the operations, check out this post on the military-focused site Task & Purpose.)
If you want to try to catch a glimpse of them in the New York area, their schedule has them crossing near the George Washington Bridge at noon, then circling over Newark, New Jersey, and then winging back over towards Brooklyn and Queens. The sortie finishes with a leg back northwards towards Connecticut, then over White Plains, NY, then down south over the Bronx and past Manhattan’s east side.
Later in the day, the two teams will fly over the Trenton, NJ area after they depart from a military base near that city at about 1:45 pm. They’ll make a series of turns, then cruise to Philadelphia at about 1:55 pm. The fly-over should end at 2:15 pm.
Maps of the planned routes are below.
The planned flight route for New York and New Jersey. (US Air Force /) The route for New Jersey and Pennsylvania. (US Air Force/)
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cometsovcupid · 11 months ago
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New Comets Ov Cupid album "EROS 433" double vinyl $30
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goalhofer · 2 years ago
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2022-23 1st NHL Assists
October 7, 2022
Cole Smith (Nashville) vs. San José.
October 12, 2022
Andrei Kuzmenko (Vancouver) at Edmonton.
October 13, 2022
Tanner Laczynski (Philadelphia) vs. New Jersey.
Nils Lundkvist (Dallas) at Nashville.
October 14, 2022
David Gustafsson (Winnipeg) vs. New York Rangers.
October 15, 2022
Arber Xhekaj (Montreal) at Washington.
John-Jason Peterka (Buffalo) vs. Florida.
Dylan Guenther (Arizona) at Boston.
October 17, 2022
Kaiden Guhle (Montreal) vs. Pittsburgh.
October 18, 2022
Jakub Lauko (Boston) at Ottawa.
October 19, 2022
Shane Wright (Seattle) vs. St. Louis.
October 20, 2022
Wyatt Johnston (Dallas) at Toronto.
Nils Åman (Vancouver) at Minnesota.
October 26, 2022
Nick Perbix (Tampa Bay) at Anaheim.
October 28, 2022
Guillaume Brisebois (Vancouver) vs. Pittsburgh.
October 29, 2022
Dylan Holloway (Edmonton) at Calgary.
October 30, 2022
Mason Shaw (Minnesota) at Chicago.
Filip Roos (Chicago) vs. Minnesota.
November 1, 2022
Marco Rossi (Minnesota) vs. Montreal.
November 9, 2022
Johnathan Kovacevic (Montreal) vs. Vancouver.
November 10, 2022
Paul Cotter (Vegas) at Buffalo.
November 15, 2022
Pontus Holmberg (Toronto) at Pittsburgh.
Will Lockwood (Vancouver) at Buffalo.
Marcus Björk (Columbus) vs. Philadelphia.
November 16, 2022
Nikita Alexandrov (St. Louis) at Chicago.
November 17, 2022
Juraj Slafkovský (Montreal) at Columbus.
Juuso Pärssinen (Nashville) vs. New York Islanders.
Nick Cicek (San José) vs. Detroit.
November 25, 2022
Simon Holmström (New York Islanders) at Columbus.
November 28, 2022
Mac Hollowell (Toronto) at Detroit.
December 4, 2022
Dylan Samberg (Winnipeg) vs. Anaheim.
December 6, 2022
Will Bitten (St. Louis) at New York Islanders.
Jack Drury (Carolina) at Anaheim.
December 9, 2022
Alexander Alexeyev; Jr. (Washington) vs. Seattle.
December 15, 2022
Brayden Pachal (Vegas) at Chicago.
December 31, 2022
Isaak Phillips (Chicago) at Columbus.
January 2, 2023
Kaedan Korczak (Vegas) at Colorado.
January 3, 2023
Anthony Richard (Montreal)  at Nashville.
Parker Wotherspoon (New York Islanders) at Vancouver.
January 13, 2023
Vincent Desharnais (Edmonton) at San José.
January 16, 2023
Fredrik Olofsson (Dallas) at Vegas.
January 19, 2023
Tyler Tucker (St. Louis) vs. Nashville.
Cale Fleury (Seattle) vs. New Jersey.
January 22, 2023
Joona Koppanen (Boston) vs. San José.
February 23, 2023
Jesper Frödén (Seattle) vs. Boston.
January 25, 2023
Ridly Greig (Ottawa) vs. New York Islanders.
January 26, 2023
Rafaël Harvey-Pinard (Montreal) vs. Detroit.
Luke Philp (Chicago) at Calgary.
February 18, 2023
Jakob Pelletier (Calgary) vs. New York Rangers.
February 27, 2023
Aatu Räty (Vancouver) at Dallas.
March 2, 2023
Luke Evangelista (Nashville) at Florida.
March 8, 2023
Cole Guttman (Chicago) at Detroit.
March 12, 2023
Pavel Dorofeyev (Vegas) at St. Louis.
March 19, 2023
Jakub Zbořil (Boston) at Buffalo.
March 21, 2023
Bobby McMann (Toronto) at New York Islanders.
March 24, 2023
Hunter McKown (Columbus) vs. New York Islanders.
March 26, 2023
Mike Kesselring (Arizona) vs. Colorado.
March 27, 2023
Lukáš Rousek (Buffalo) vs. Montreal.
March 28, 2023
Wyatt Kaiser (Chicago) vs. Dallas.
March 30, 2023
Henry Thrun (San José) vs. Vegas.
April 1, 2023
Darren Raddysh (Tampa Bay) vs. New York Islanders.
April 2, 2023
Nick Abruzzese (Toronto) vs. Detroit.
April 4, 2023
Danil Gushchin (San José) vs. Colorado.
April 6, 2023
Samuel Bolduc (New York Islanders) vs. Tampa Bay.
Spencer Stastney (Nashville) vs. Carolina.
April 10, 2023
Jake Livingstone (Nashville) at Calgary.
April 11, 2023
Matthew Knies (Toronto) at Tampa Bay.
Tim Berni (Columbus) at Philadelphia.
April 13, 2023
Joël Teasdale (Montreal) vs. Boston.
Sammy Walker (Minnesota) at Nashville.
Damien Giroux (Minnesota) at Nashville.
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goalhofer · 9 months ago
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Every goal of the 2024 IIHF Worlds Day 8
U.S.A. vs. Poland
#5 Michael Kesselring (2) Tkachuk (2), Vlasic (2) 10:11 2nd (U.S.A. 1-0 Poland)
#7 Braeden Tkachuk (3) Pinto (4), Sanderson (3) 19:17 2nd (U.S.A. 2-0 Poland)
#22 Cole Caufield (1) Tkachuk (3) 1:11 3rd (U.S.A. 3-0 Poland)
#18 Grzegorz Pasiut (1) Wronka (3), Kolusz (1) 6:22 3rd (U.S.A. 3-1 Poland)
#22 Cole Caufield (2) Tkachuk (4), Pinto (5) 9:15 3rd (U.S.A. 4-1 Poland)
Great Britain vs. Denmark
#14 Liam Kirk (2) Curran (2), Ruopp (1) 5:25 1st (Great Britain 1-0 Denmark)
#29 Mikkel Aagaard (1) Fisker-Mølgaard (2), Olesen (2) 6:26 1st (Great Britain 1-1 Denmark)
#42 Philip Bruggisser (1)(PP) Olesen (3), Wejse-Mathiasen (3) 8:25 1st (Great Britain 1-2 Denmark)
#94 Cade Neisen (1) Mosey (2), Lake (2) 10:34 1st (Great Britain 2-2 Denmark)
#29 Mikkel Aagaard (2) Olesen (4), Fisker-Mølgaard (3) 1:42 2nd (Great Britain 2-3 Denmark)
#79 Nate Halbert (1) Lachowicz (1), Perlini (1) 18:34 2nd (Great Britain 3-3 Denmark)
#65 Christian Wejse-Mathiasen (3)(PP) Blichfeld (3), Bruggisser (3) 12:01 3rd (Great Britain 3-4 Denmark)
Austria vs. Czech Republic
#73 Ondřej Kaše (2)(PS) 19:32 1st (Austria 0-1 Czech Republic)
#81 Dominik Kubalík (2)(PP) Tomášek (3), Špaček (2) 15:49 2nd (Austria 0-2 Czech Republic)
#19 Jakub Flek (2) Stránský (1) 16:53 2nd (Austria 0-3 Czech Republic)
#96 David Tomášek (1) Palát (3), Kubalík (1) 1:31 3rd (Austria 0-4 Czech Republic)
Germany vs. Kazakhstan
#27 Maksymilian Szuber (1) Stachowiak (2), Peterka (1) 1:02 1st (Germany 1-0 Kazakhstan)
#62 Parker Tuomie (2) Kastner (1), Ugbekile (3) 2:24 1st (Germany 2-0 Kazakhstan)
#48 Roman Starchenko (2)(PP) Rymarev (3), Panyukov (2) 7:59 1st (Germany 2-1 Kazakhstan)
#33 John-Jason Peterka (3) Stachowiak (3), Wissmann (3) 1:11 2nd (Germany 3-1 Kazakhstan)
#73 Lukas Reichel (1) Pföderl (4) 8:29 2nd (Germany 4-1 Kazakhstan)
#49 Lukas Kälble (2) Peterka (2), Stachowiak (4) 15:17 2nd (Germany 5-1 Kazakhstan)
#73 Lukas Reichel (2) Peterka (3), Stachowiak (5) 10:27 3rd (Germany 6-1 Kazakhstan)
#31 Artyom Korolyov (1) Boiko (1), Asetov (1) 11:52 3rd (Germany 6-2 Kazakhstan)
#95 Frederik Tiffels (1)(SH) Sturm (2) 14:14 3rd (Germany 7-2 Kazakhstan)
#7 Maximilian Kastner (1) Ehl (2), Tuomie (2) 18:34 3rd (Germany 8-2 Kazakhstan)
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cometsovcupid · 7 years ago
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New Comets Ov Cupid track "Comets Tales"
New Comets Ov Cupid track “Comets Tales”
New Comets Ov Cupid track. Guitar and Synth Cosmic Music #spacemusic #ambient #kosmiche #cosmic https://cometsovcupid.bandcamp.com/track/comet-tales //bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/track=2872975593/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/
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cometsovcupid · 8 years ago
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NEW COMETS OV CUPID "SCYTHIAN EP"
NEW COMETS OV CUPID “SCYTHIAN EP”
New Comets Ov Cupid EP. Over the last few years Comets Ov Cupid has taken on a power trio formation to play more metallic instrumental Space Rock pieces. Erik Wivinus (bass) and Matt Entsminger (drums) both hailing from the legendary Minneapolis Space Rock Band Thunderbolt Pagoda. Erik and Matt bring forth a volcanic energy that really moves Comets into some exciting new territory. I hope you…
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cometsovcupid · 6 years ago
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Atlas Kept His Gripes To Himself and Did His Job: Heavy Minnesota Music – Show Announcement: Comets ov Cupid, Darkrad, Psychomantic the Ritual Death Cult|Saturday, Feb. 2nd @ Moon Palace Books BY ADAM JOHNSON · JANUARY 31, 2019
Music of the End Times The performing arts and the occult have long been bedfellows, but the results of that collaboration are historically…inconsistent (at best). Local record label/collective Music of the End Times, however, have never failed to raise a little Hell while the material world falls around them. The seasons are feeling restless, and to celebrate the halfway point between the winter solstice and spring equinox Music of the End Times is conducting Imbolc Rituals at Moon Palace Books this Saturday, February 2nd.
The evening begins with the disassembling electronic assault of Psychomantic the Ritual Death Cult.
PtRDC acts as local provocateur Kevin Cosgrove’s direct link to the more propulsive and chaotic humours of our world, always critical of existence, yet always engaging. If Ivo Shandor were throwing parties in today’s metropolis, Psychomantic the Ritual Death Cult would be the perfect DJ to spin the world into oblivion.
Comets ov Cupid Gothic guitar guru Jason Kesselring will sit in with evocative industrial architects Darkrad next, but join Erik Wivinus and Matt Entsminger, on bass and drums respectively, as Comets ov Cupid, a space rock trio proclaiming a pandemic pagan prayer that could evoke (not to mention deafen) Cthulhu.
Winter has finally chosen to show her teeth, and she’s wearing corpse paint this year. But we’re halfway to spring. Revel in the respite from this Norwegian-black-metal-cold this Saturn’s Day at Moon Palace Books, 3032 Minnehaha Avenue. The St. Brigid’s Day celebration starts at 9:00 PM, and there is a door fee of $5-$10. This hootenanny is a 21+ event.
https://www.reviler.org/2019/01/31/atlas-kept-his-gripes-to-himself-and-did-his-job-heavy-minnesota-music-show-announcement-comets-ov-cupid-darkrad-psychomantic-the-ritual-death-cultsaturday-feb-2nd-moon-palace-books/?fbclid=IwAR30G_ljCb26deKGzsgxVCF1m1ij5FaNcoXciKCl9CJHtvF6pXEqy5GRtvA
Moon Palace Show for Imbolc and Reviler mention Atlas Kept His Gripes To Himself and Did His Job: Heavy Minnesota Music – Show Announcement: Comets ov Cupid, Darkrad, Psychomantic the Ritual Death Cult|Saturday, Feb.
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cometsovcupid · 6 years ago
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"81818" Comets Ov Cupid Teaser For Full length DVD
“81818” Comets Ov Cupid Teaser For Full length DVD
Here is a short teaser of our upcoming performance video 81818. Tentatively set to be released in the fall.
Jason Kesselring on guitar Erik Wivinus on Bass Matt Enstminger on Drums
Project 81818
Location: Safeguard Missle Complex (aka North Dakota Pyramid or “Illuminati Pyramid”) and RSL#3 Missle site. Both are now out of…
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cometsovcupid · 6 years ago
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Comets Ov Cupid Avalon Theatre Minneapolis 10 November 2018
Comets Ov Cupid Avalon Theatre Minneapolis 10 November 2018
Set:
81818 Viking Spacecraft Scythian Funeral
Jason Kesselring – guitar Matt Entsminger – drums Erik Wivinus – bass
Recorded by Tom Michaels.
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