Global Classical Month Inc Silk Road Project, Brazil, Peace Day & Autumn kmuw.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kmuw.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Article Contributed by conqueroo | Published on Sunday, July 25, 2021
Late style: You can only get there if you’ve been around long enough to have had an early and a middle one. Maturity, wisdom, refinement are its hallmarks. And having done things a certain way for a time, you might want to do them differently in order to arrive someplace new, someplace surprising.
With
Late Style,
Wesley Stace, the artist formerly known as John Wesley Harding, but before that as Wesley Stace, has done things differently. Having begun to put some new lyrics to music, in his usual way, singing to an acoustic guitar, he realized he was coming up with old solutions, reinventing a wheel he had already made, with chord progressions and melodies that worked as folk and pop songs but were not satisfying his desire for something fresh, something he’d be excited to listen to in 2021.
Netflix’s ‘We the People’: TV Review Daniel Fienberg
Memory is a powerful, if inaccurate, curating tool.
It’s like how current seasons of
Saturday Night Live are never as good as the seasons from your youth, because you mostly recall only standout sketches from historical episodes that, realistically, had a similar ratio of hits-to-misses as new episodes.
Or take
Schoolhouse Rock!, the iconic cartoon songs that taught kids everything from grammar to basic mathematics to governance between 1973 and 1984. The
Schoolhouse Rock! team mostly Bob Dorough and Lynn Ahrens wrote dozens of songs and, depending on your age, you might only remember a half-dozen, or possibly just “Conjunction Junction” and “I’m Just a Bill.” Trust me, they weren’t all that good.
Vinyl Vault—Dave Frishberg: I Can t Take You Nowhere kuvo.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kuvo.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.