Monday, 14 February 2011

HA!

Alireza Gorbani & Dorsaf Hamdani present Ivresses @ Festival Au Fil des Voix 2/9/11


1. Le Sacre de Kayyam
2. L'Ivresse
3. L'Existence
4. Amoureux
5. Enivrement
6. L'Echanson

Alireza Ghorbani (chant classique persan)
Dorsaf Hamdani (chant classique arabe)
Ali Ghamsary (composition, tar, divan)
Sohrab Pournazeri (Kamanche, Tanbur)
Hussein Zahawy (Daf, Bendir, Darbouka, Dayera)
Sofiane Negra (Oud)
Keyvan Chemirani (Zarb, Udu)

01:13:37

Display of affection

♥Happy Valentine's♥

(Thanx Rob!)

Sunday, 13 February 2011

Yemeni protesters march on palace; clashes erupt

A protester has portraits of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh and his son Ahmed (C-top) stapled on her clothes during a demonstration in Sanaa (AFP)
Anti-government protesters clashed with police trying to prevent them from marching towards Yemen's presidential palace in Sanaa on Sunday, witnesses said.
Shortly before the clashes, the opposition agreed to enter talks with President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who is keen to avert an Egypt-style revolt in the country, a US ally against Al Qaeda.
"The Yemeni people want the fall of the regime," protesters shouted during the demonstration attended by about 1,000 people, before dozens broke off to march to the palace. "A Yemeni revolution after the Egyptian revolution."
Sporadic anti-government protests have gathered momentum in Yemen. Earlier this month, tens of thousands took part in an opposition-led "Day of Rage" to demand a change of government, inspired by popular protests in Tunisia and Egypt.
Pro- and anti-government protesters have clashed in recent days.
Opposition officials said 10 protesters were detained in Sanaa and 120 were taken into custody overnight in the city of Taiz, where authorities broke up a demonstration on Saturday.
Four people were hurt in the Sanaa clashes, in which police hit protesters with batons and demonstrators threw rocks at police, witnesses said.
Saleh, in power for more than three decades and concerned about unrest in some parts of the Arab world, has said he will step down in 2013 and pledged his son will not take over the reins of government. He invited the opposition for talks.
"The opposition does not reject what came in the invitation by the president and is ready to sign an agreement in no more than a week," said former Foreign Minister Mohammed Basindwa, now an opposition politician, adding that the talks should include Western or Gulf observers.
"Past experience is what has spurred us to request that representatives of the Friends of Yemen (donor countries) be in observance," he said.
Instability in Yemen would present serious political and security risks for Gulf states. The United States relies heavily on Saleh to help combat al Qaeda's Yemen-based arm, which also carries out attacks in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.
Saleh, a shrewd political survivor, has backed out of previous promises to step aside. Analysts say his concessions could be a genuine way to exit gracefully but he may hope to wait out regional unrest and reassert his dominance another day.
The offer of talks, along with other concessions, was his boldest gambit yet to stave off turmoil in Yemen and avert a showdown with protesters in the poverty-stricken state.
Yemen's opposition wants assurances that reforms would be implemented and has demanded better living conditions for Yemenis, about 40 percent of whom live on less than $2 a day, while a third suffer from chronic hunger.
@'Emirates 24/7'

Why Bradley Manning Is a Patriot, Not a Criminal: An Opening Statement for the Defense of Private Manning

Crude reality

The Decline and Fall of the American Empire

A soft landing for America 40 years from now?  Don’t bet on it.  The demise of the United States as the global superpower could come far more quickly than anyone imagines.  If Washington is dreaming of 2040 or 2050 as the end of the American Century, a more realistic assessment of domestic and global trends suggests that in 2025, just 15 years from now, it could all be over except for the shouting.
Despite the aura of omnipotence most empires project, a look at their history should remind us that they are fragile organisms. So delicate is their ecology of power that, when things start to go truly bad, empires regularly unravel with unholy speed: just a year for Portugal, two years for the Soviet Union, eight years for France, 11 years for the Ottomans, 17 years for Great Britain, and, in all likelihood, 22 years for the United States, counting from the crucial year 2003.
Future historians are likely to identify the Bush administration’s rash invasion of Iraq in that year as the start of America's downfall. However, instead of the bloodshed that marked the end of so many past empires, with cities burning and civilians slaughtered, this twenty-first century imperial collapse could come relatively quietly through the invisible tendrils of economic collapse or cyberwarfare.
But have no doubt: when Washington's global dominion finally ends, there will be painful daily reminders of what such a loss of power means for Americans in every walk of life. As a half-dozen European nations have discovered, imperial decline tends to have a remarkably demoralizing impact on a society, regularly bringing at least a generation of economic privation. As the economy cools, political temperatures rise, often sparking serious domestic unrest.
Available economic, educational, and military data indicate that, when it comes to US global power, negative trends will aggregate rapidly by 2020 and are likely to reach a critical mass no later than 2030. The American Century, proclaimed so triumphantly at the start of World War II, will be tattered and fading by 2025, its eighth decade, and could be history by 2030.
Significantly, in 2008, the US National Intelligence Council admitted for the first time that America's global power was indeed on a declining trajectory. In one of its periodic futuristic reports, Global Trends 2025, the Council cited “the transfer of global wealth and economic power now under way, roughly from West to East" and "without precedent in modern history,” as the primary factor in the decline of the “United States' relative strength—even in the military realm.” Like many in Washington, however, the Council’s analysts anticipated a very long, very soft landing for American global preeminence, and harbored the hope that somehow the US would long “retain unique military capabilities… to project military power globally” for decades to come...
 Continue reading
Alfred W. McCoy @'The Nation'

Human drum machine

Anatomical Sleeping Bag

via

Mubarak slammed U.S. in phone call with Israeli MK before resignation

Pentagon seeks $553 billion

SimplyNoise


Hear what your Mind has been missing...

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SimplyNoise

Patti Smith - London 1976 +





PATTI SMITH
London 1976 [no label, 1CD]

Live at the Roundhouse, London, May 17, 1976 - very good audience recording?; plus bonus tracks from 1975 and rare interviews. Ripped from vinyl.
Reviewing a 2007 concert at the Roundhouse in London, Kevin Harley wrote in The Independent: “You’ve got to have faith when it comes to Patti Smith. In May 1976, playing her first-ever UK shows at the Roundhouse, she aspired to alchemise rock ‘n’ roll, politics and poetry in an outsider’s bid for revolution and transcendence. The conviction holds firm: Smith’s concerts are testimonies to a belief that rock has to strive to matter.”
While Smith’s belief in the power of rock has not wavered, as her 2010 year-end Bowery shows continue to indicate, not many were fortunate enough to witness Smith’s early shows in the United Kingdom.
But thanks to booomboom, who shared these tracks from an ultra rare vinyl on Dime, fans can now celebrate in this slice of Patti Smith history.
Click on the highlighted tracks to download the MP3s (these are high quality MP3s - sample rate of 224 kbps). As far as we can ascertain, these tracks have never been officially released on CD.
London Roundhouse, May 17, 1976
Track 01. Free Money (7.0MB)
Track 02. Pissing In A River (7.0MB)
Track 03. Pumping (My Heart) (4.4MB)
Track 04. Ain’t It Strange (12.2MB)
Track 05. Gloria (11.1MB)
Track 06. Time Is On My Side (5.6MB)
Poetry reading at St. Mark’s Church, January 1, 1975
Track 07. Histories Of The Universe/Seven Ways Of Going, Parade* (13.4MB - megaupload link)
This track is also offered as a free download here. (According to the wikipedia, 12 albums are available for free download in MP3 format by Giorno Poetry Systems at UbuWeb.com).

November 29, 1976
Track 08. Hungerthon Interview WNEW (8.2MB)
Live at Central Park, May 11, 1975
Track 09. Piss Factory (7.9MB)
Track 10. War Is Over (2.0MB)
Track 11. Land (11.9MB)
With Scott Muni (?), early 1976
Track 12. Radio Interview WNEW (20.6MB - visit the html page to download the track)
Track 12. Radio Interview WNEW (megaupload alternative link)
* Also found on Cash Cow - The Best of Giorno Poetry Systems, 1965-1993 (discontinued).
@'BigO'

Long Live Egypt تحيا مصر

Freedom’

John Coltrane - Interview with Arnold Blume (June 15th 1958)


This previously unreleased full recording (from June 15, 1958) has been made available in conjunction with the Slought Foundation "Coltrane." initiative. An excerpted transcription, "An Interview with John Coltrane” by August Blume, was first published in The Jazz Review 2, no. 1 (January 1959)
Recorded at Blume’s home in Baltimore, Maryland prior to that evening’s performance of the Miles Davis Quintet (with John Coltrane, Red Garland, Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones) at The Crystal Caverns, Washington, D.C.
Audio (46 min)
@'slought.org'
Liberated from HerrB's sadly closed 'Pathways To Unknown Worlds' blog!

REpost: Underground Resistance - Transition

 
There will come a time in your life when you will ask yourself a series of questions.
Am I happy with who I am?
Am I happy with the people around me?
Am I happy with what I’m doing?
Am I happy with the way my life is going?
Do I have a life or am I just living?
Do not let these questions restrain or trouble you just point youself in the direction of your dreams 
Find your strengh in the sound and make your transition.
Do not spend too much time thinking and not enough doing.
Did I try the hardest at any of my dreams?
Did I purposely let others discourage me when I knew I could?
Will I die never knowing what I could have been or could of done?
Do not let these doubts restrain or trouble you just point yourself in the direction of your dreams.
Find your strength in the sound and make your transition.

There will be people who say you can’t - you will.
There will be people who say you don't mix this with that and you will say "watch me".
There will be people who will say play it safe, that's too risky - you will take that chance and have no fear.
You won't let these questions restrain or trouble you.
You will point yourself in the direction of your dreams.
You will find the strength in the sound and make your transition.

For those who know it's time to leave the house and go back to the field.
Find your strength in the sound and make your transition.
Bonus: Audio
Underground Resistance - 'Transition' (Acapella)

FACT mix 214 - Optimo (Jan '11)

  
Download
Tracklist:
Odd Machine – Phase In (edit)
Cindytalk – Our Shadow, Remembered
Alvo Noto & Ryuichi Sakamoto – Morning
This Mortal Coil – Song To The Siren (JD Twitch Reversion)
Zoviet France – The Decriminalisation Of Country Music
Sun City Girls – Come Maddalena
Forest Swords – The Light
Oneohtrix Point Never – Young Beidnahga
No Man – Days In The Trees
Tomita – Clair De Lune
Conrad Schnitzler – Ballet Statique
Peter Baumann – This Day
Reichmann – Wunderbar
Duet Emmo – The First Person
Carol – So Low
Zoviet France – Vienna (extract)

Spank!!! #21

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For that naughty boy oop north!
Via

What Egypt Can Teach America

Scientology: The Truth Rundown

Algerian protesters clash with police as Egypt fervour spreads

Algerian riot police clash with protesters during an anti-government demonstration in Algiers
Algerian riot police clash with protesters during an anti-government demonstration in Algiers. Photograph: Louafi Larbi/Reuters 
Algerian police have beaten back around 2,000 demonstrators who tried to rally in central Algiers as aftershocks from the Egyptian revolution rumbled throughout the Middle East.
Demonstrations in Algiers quickly turned to running clashes with police who had been ordered by the government of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to enforce a protests ban. Police took up positions throughout the centre of the city hours after the tumultuous scenes in Cairo, which are likely to have significant ramifications across the region.
Even before Egypt's Hosni Mubarak had stepped down, the 12-year regime of Bouteflika had been considered to be under most threat from the popular uprisings now galvanising the Arab states. Wedged alongside Tunisia, where President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali was ousted 30 days ago, and near Egypt, which fell on Friday, the unstable nation has many of the characteristics of both – a disenfranchised youth and rising prices of basic goods, such as sugar and cooking oil.
It also shares a large, pervasive security presence, authoritarian rule and a general sense that citizens are not benefiting from its wealth and resources.
Late in the afternoon, protesters briefly broke a cordon and officials say that 400 were arrested by police – who vastly outnumbered them. Most were then released.
The demonstrations were organised, as they were in Yemen, nearly 3,000 miles away, where at least 5,000 people, mainly youths, rallied in the capital, Sana'a to call for Egypt-style reform.
In Sana'a, President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who took office around the same time as Mubarak and has enjoyed largely unchecked power ever since, called an emergency meeting of his security chiefs and senior ministers hours after the 82-year-old Egyptian leader left Cairo.
Saleh has allowed demonstrations to take place for the past four weeks and has said he would not stand again as president when his current term expires in 2013. Protesters in Sana'a and the coastal city of Aden railed against food prices and poor services. But, as was the case elsewhere, lack of accountability in government was also a dominant theme.
Governments across the region have made a string of concessions as the events in Tunisia and Egypt unfolded, electrifying citizens who had become conditioned to the status quo of soaring prices, few job opportunities and almost no accountability among officials who enjoy far greater privileges than them.
In Jordan, King Abdullah is yet to form a new government after sacking the prime minister and his ministers in late January – a move widely believed to have been inspired by the risk that the revolts may soon be felt there. Weekly demonstrations against prices and services have taken place since early December – before the Tunisian uprising – and have focused on broadly similar themes of disenfranchisement and limited means to bring about change.
Jordanians have historically seen the monarchy as benevolent and have not subjected it to the same degree of scrutiny as elected officials. However, there is a growing inclination among the country's young to see the legitimacy of the kingdom as conditional, not absolute.
King Abdullah last week struck a deal with Jordan's opposition, in which he promised urgent political and economic reform, which would give the Muslim Brotherhood and a leftist bloc a greater say in state affairs.
"Any type of reform will help Jordan not reach the levels of Egypt," said the secretary general of the Islamic Action Front (Muslim Brotherhood), Zaki bin Irsheid. "But what happened in Tunis and then Egypt has surprised everyone. No one expected that.
"A lot of people are comparing the French revolution to the Tunisian revolution. It changed Europe and this will change the Middle East."
In Algeria and Jordan, youth comprise a large percentage of the population and feel more disadvantaged than the middle classes that stirred the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt. More than 70% of Jordanians are aged under 30.
"There has been an awakening of political awareness among the young who have been waiting for solutions that have never come and are not really in the menu now," said one senior western official. "They are saying: 'Why should we carry on like this?'
"There is a cronyist, lethargic, complacent political oligarchy that is resistant to reform. Government ministers are hamstrung by a system underneath them that doesn't do what they say. The body politic is not responding."
Syria, too, has been moved to respond. The Ba'athist state took the surprise step of unblocking the social media sites Facebook, Twitter, Myspace and YouTube, all of which had been used during the Tunisian and Egyptian uprisings. The Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, has offered around $400m (£250m) in heating fuel subsidies to the county's lower income earners.
The effects of the revolution have also been felt in Iraq, where the prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, has said he will not stand for a third term. Maliki has ordered three mega-generators to be installed in Baghdad to deal with the city's chronic electricity shortages.
"He is terrified about electricity," said one senior Iraqi official. "He is convinced that with the zeal alive in the region now, it will bring his government down if he doesn't fix it."
Martin Chulov @'The Guardian'

بیانیه شورای هماهنگی راه سبز امید درباره راهپیمایی ۲۵ بهمن

REpost: Coloured crayons as pixel art


The art of Christan Faur here.
Via 'drawn' here.

Egypt: Hosni Mubarak used last 18 days in power to secure his fortune

Sudan dictator: I’ll use Facebook to crush opposition

Iran's opposition planning protests

A Facebook page promoting the February 14 protests reads, 'Iran's freedom valentine - don't forget our date'
Amid reports of a low turnout for the annual march commemorating the anniversary of Iran's Islamic revolution on Friday, there are calls among opposition leaders for nationwide marches against the government on Monday.
Protesters, including university students, truck drivers and gold merchants are said to be organising marches across the country under the umbrella of the country's Green Movement, apparently inspired by recents demonstrations in Egypt and Tunisia.
The movement, also known as the Green Wave, made international headlines after the disputed 2009 presidential elections which saw Mahmoud Ahmadinejad win a second term in office.
Monday's protests have been called at the behest of Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, which the movement backed as opposition presidential candidates in the election two years ago.
The governments of both Tunisia and Egypt were successfully toppled via massive and prolonged protests and rallies.
Permission to hold rallies in Egypt was sought prior to the demonstrators' actions but no such permit has not been granted in Iran, and the country's Revolutionary Guard has already promised to forcefully confront any protesters.
Some of the posters advertising Monday's rally on Facebook refer to February 14 day as a "valentine to Iran's freedom". The main Facebook page calling for demonstrations has over 43,000 followers.
While the government says that 50 million people turned up for the 32nd anniversary of the revolution, which, on the Iranian calender, takes place on the 22nd day of the month of Bahman, those numbers are disputed by some independent media.
On the back of the toppling of Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, on Friday, some Iranian officials have suggested parallels between the February 11, 1979 departure of Iran's shah and Mubarak's ousting.
Crackdowns
While it remains to be seen if Monday's protests materialise, there are reports that at least 14 activists have been arrested in recent days and that Karroubi has been placed under house arrest.
Among those reportedly arrested are some of Mousavi's inner circle.
Kaleme.com has named them as Mohammad Hossein Sharifzadegan, who is Mousavi's brother in law and a former welfare minister, as well as Saleh Noghrehkar, who heads Mousavi's legal team.
According to Irangreenvoice.com, they also include Mostafa Mir-Ahamadizadeh, a law professor at Qom University, adviser to Karroubi and an ally of Mohammad Khatami, Iran's former president and a noted reformist.

Irangreenvoice.com says that Mir-Ahamadizadeh has been taken to "a prison run by the Intelligence Bureau of Qom".
The state has also engaged in jamming satellite signals and has blocked the word "Bahman" from search engines.
'Arab envy'
Kelly Niknejad, founder and editor in chief of news site Tehranbureau.com, told Al Jazeera that it is hard to tell what, if anything, may unfold on Iran's streets on Monday.
"The Iranian government did a very effective job of keeping the protest down," said Niknejad, referring to the absence of protests in Iran since 2009.
"They've made it such a high-stakes game to go out and protest."

 
As a result, Niknejad says she is surprised that Karroubi and Mousavi have called for the protests.
"Perhaps they know Iranians in away that those of us who live on the sidelines don't ... perhaps they know something that we don't," she said.
Niknejad, who has been in touch with people in Iran, said that while some have said they will go out and protest, many are "are scared to death".
She also says there may be a case of "Arab envy" among some anti-government Iranians.
With events in Egypt and Tunisia in mind, it seems that there has been a renewed interest in the opposition movement in Iran - at least in the expatriate community - but while interest outside the country might be a reflection of the mood within Iran's borders, it will not necessarily translate to action there.
"It's easy to raise your fist from behind the veil of the laptop," said Niknejad.
Vested interests
While deposed leaders such as Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, the Tunisian president who fled to Saudi Arabia on January 14, have often fled abroad, Niknejad says she cannot see the same happening to Iran's leadership should any uprising be successful.
"I can't imagine Mr Khamenei (Iran's supreme leader) going to a Swiss cottage to live out the rest of his days," she said.
Niknejad said the establishment in Iran will "fight tooth and nail" to remain in power and that it seems unlikely that they would have safe havens outside the country.
The powerful Revolutionary Guard in Iran has a major financial stake in Iran, one far greater than even the Egyptian military.
It is heavily invested in Iran's economy, including petroleum development, construction, weapons manufacturing, communication system, and as a result it has been specifically targeted by international sanctions on Iran.
Niknejad also points out that compared to Iranian security forces, who "beat Iranians to a pulp" in the 2009 protests, the military in Egypt - where journalists were still able to enter and talk to people at the height of the unrest - was relatively benign.
"Egypt on a bad day is better than Iran is on a good day," she said.
D Parvaz @'Al Jazeera'
Control Room  
Al Jazeera

Palestinian negotiator Erakat quits due to leaks

Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erakat tendered his resignation on Saturday amid deadlock in efforts to renew peace talks with Israel, a Palestinian official said.Erakat told AFP he was stepping down because of his responsibility for the disclosure of confidential documents on Al-Jazeera, shortly after his resignation was announced by senior PLO Yasser Abed Rabbo.
The chief negotiator said he was assuming "responsibility for the theft of documents from his office" that he said had been "deliberately" tampered with.
Last month, Erakat accused Al-Jazeera of taking part in a campaign to overthrow the Palestinian Authority (PA) after the Doha-based television began to release more than 1,600 confidential files known as "The Palestine Papers."
The documents, shared by Al-Jazeera and Britain's Guardian daily, expose concessions to Israel in 10 years of secret peace talks, embarrassing and angering the Palestinian leadership.
Erakat at the time accused Al-Jazeera of trying to discredit the peace process and provoke his people into "a revolution against their leaders in order to bring down the Palestinian political system."
He pointed to a possible US-Israeli effort to topple the PA because of its refusal to take part in US-brokered direct peace talks unless the Jewish state halts West Bank settlement construction.
The files allege that Palestinian negotiators offered unprecedented concessions during peace negotiations, including on the ultra-sensitive subjects of Jerusalem and refugees, with nothing in return from Israel.
They also show PA members closely cooperating with Israel in its fight against the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, Fatah's bitter rival which rules the Gaza Strip.
Hamas on Saturday welcomed Erakat's offer to resign.
The step "shows that the leaked documents were authentic," spokesman Fawzi Barhum told AFP, urging the Palestine Liberation Organisation to halt all negotiations with Israel.
@'AFP'

The Secret Rally That Sparked an Uprising


The Moor Next Door

Reflections: The Vault: A dying friend's farewell ball

Good morning revolution: A to do list

Activists Push for Heroin Help in UN Russia Visit

The London-based International Harm Reduction Association (IHRA) and 16 HIV rights groups are urging the UN's rights mission to lobby Russia to legalize methadone in order to fight HIV/AIDS and heroin addiction. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay is scheduled next week to meet Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, government officials and 60 rights campaigners during a five-day visit to Moscow.
Russia, home to 1 million HIV-positive people, has one of the fastest growing HIV/AIDS epidemics in the world, according to the World Health Organization. The epidemic is being fueled by as many as 3 million heroin addicts, many of whom use dirty needles, local health groups say. However, Russia refuses to support harm reduction programs such as needle exchanges, or to legalize methadone to treat heroin addicts, which WHO deems essential in fighting the epidemic.
According to Russia's Health Ministry, methadone's effectiveness is unproven. Russia's chief medical official, Gennady Onishchenko, has referred to it as "just another narcotic."
"This is a national health crisis and a human rights priority in Russia that must be raised at the highest levels," said Damon Barrett, an IHRA senior analyst. "The fact that the government's policy is so incomprehensible is what makes it so frustrating."
HIV-positive Russian activist Irina Teplinskaya will meet with Pillay during her visit, according to the Andrey Rylkov Foundation for which Teplinskaya volunteers. Injection drug users with HIV are less likely to receive antiretroviral therapy, she said. "Because there is no opioid substitution therapy in Russia, drug-dependent people are not able to receive treatment for HIV," said Teplinskaya, who is also a heroin user.
@'The Body'

Impulsive Cross-Dressing in Parkinson's Disease Treated With Ropinerole

Happy Birthday Henry!

Poster by Glen E. Friedman & Shepard Fairey
HERE

Mysterious Voynich manuscript dates back to the 15th century

African Head Charge - Voodoo of the Godsent (3 track preview)

   

The Roots – Jam (ft. Marcus Miller, Christian Scott & more) @ Highline Ballroom, NYC 6-21-10


The Roots jumped into an amazing 20 minute improvised jam with jazz icons Marcus Miller on bass and Christian Scott on trumpet. Joining them were other talented musicians including Teodross Avery, Jason Moran, Maurice Brown, and of course, the Roots Crew

DOWNLOAD
(left click to play, right click to download)

via All The Way Live