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SOLENOÏDE, émission de 'musiques imaginogènes' diffusée sur 30 radios dans le monde
Solénoïde (27.01.2025) - L'équipage de Solénoïde vous embarque dans son voyage musical annuel avec Rétrobalisage 2024, une rétrospective dédiée aux pépites discographiques de l'année écoulée. Après avoir exploré plusieurs centaines d'albums, ce sont 15 œuvres marquantes, issues pour la plupart de labels indépendants, qui ont été soigneusement sélectionnées. Dans cette seconde partie, nous mettons en lumière 8 albums singuliers, mêlant sonorités néoclassiques, ambiances électroniques et influences world.
Drummer Sim Cain played with the Rollins Band from 1987 until 1997. Before joining Rollins Band, Sim played in the instrumental trio Gone, alongside future Rollins Band bassist Andrew Weiss and Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn. He has also recorded with artists like David Poe, Marc Ribot, David Shea, and played in Elliott Sharp's Terraplane group. Cain appeared on Ween's 2004 album Quebec and performed with blues legend Hubert Sumlin in the early 2000s.
Die Brainwashed - Radio Edition ist eine einstündige Show mit Musik von den Künstlern und Labels auf Brainwashed.com. 1. Water Damage, "Fuck That : Reel 13 (excerpt)" (2 Songs) 2023 12XU 2. Belbury Poly, "The Wrong Spot" (The Path) 2023 Ghost Box 3. Hyunhye Seo, "Eel I (Excerpt)" (Eel) 2023 Room40 4. Umeko Ando, "Iuta Upopo" (Upopo Sanke) 2023 Pingipung 5. Alabaster DePlume, "Did You Know (feat. Momoko Gill)" (Come With Fierce Grace) 2023 International Anthem 6. Cabaret Voltaire, "Soul Vine [70 Billion People]" (Plasticity) 1992 Plastex 7. David Shea, "XY Suite" (Una Nota Solo) 2005 Metta Editions / 2023 Room40 8. Not Waving, "Never Let Me Go" (The Place I've Been Missing) 2023 Ecstatic 9. Brontez Purnell, "Girl From Ghost Town" (No Jack Swing) 2023 Dark Entries 10. lovesliescrushing, "below and above" (psalms) 2022 self-released * Eine Sendung vom 15. Juli 2023. # Brainwashed - Radio Edition Email podcast at brainwashed dot com to say who you are; what you like; what you want to hear; share pictures for the podcast of where you're from, your computer or MP3 player with or without the Brainwashed Podcast Playing; and win free music! We have no tracking information, no idea who's listening to these things so the more feedback that comes in, the more frequent podcasts will come. You will not be put on any spam list and your information will remain completely private and not farmed out to a third party. Thanks for your attention and thanks for listening. * http://brainwashed.com
SOLENOÏDE, émission de 'musiques imaginogènes' diffusée sur 30 radios dans le monde
Solénoïde (08.04.2024) - Cette Mission 231 mettra en avant quatre albums de musiques à vocation visuelle, reflétant une actualité discographique dynamique. Cette émission explorera des univers sensoriels et émotionnels uniques, avec notamment le retour de David Shea, compositeur et DJ légendaire du label Sub Rosa, avec son nouvel album "The Ship", bande originale d'un jeu de réalité virtuelle. Elle vous emmènera également en Norvège avec l'album contemplatif "Hereafter" de Kim Myhr, ainsi qu'au Portugal avec le premier opus du collectif Turning Point, mêlant musique électronique, industrielle et fado. Enfin, l'émission mettra en lumière la violoniste italienne Laura Masotto et son album "The Spirit of Things" (7K!), une œuvre précise et audacieuse inspirée par le chamanisme, offrant une ambiance cinématographique et mystérieuse.
Welcome Natty Nation to another episode "Strawberry Ice Cream"We welcome special guests Bobby Shelton and David Shea! Bobby Shelton tells us about his time in the military working on fighter jets, living in Vegas and umpiring collegiate level softball! Join us as we hear some fun tales and some tales we can't be told! Remember to please like, comment and subscribe!Socials:@TheNaturalsPodSweet Derek: @sweetderek702Website: www.thenaturalspod.com
SOLENOÏDE, émission de 'musiques imaginogènes' diffusée sur 30 radios dans le monde
Solénoïde (04.12.2023) - Cette semaine, Solénoïde vous entrainera dans une aventure sonore débordante d'hommages et de détournements. La 12e Cover Box vous plongera dans un blind-test de reprises récréatives et décalées. Attendez-vous à des relectures inspirées et parfois excentriques qui éveilleront votre mémoire musicale ! Cette émission débutera avec l'épopée psychédélique de Don et Francoiz, un duo marquant de la scène musicale francophone. Leur album "Cover Songs In Inferno" dévoile dix reprises soigneusement sélectionnées pour créer une toile musicale fascinante. Ce programme soulignera aussi la célébration du 25e anniversaire du label Staubgold avec l'album exceptionnel "Velvet Serenade", une collaboration inattendue entre Lee Ranaldo de Sonic Youth et Pascal Comelade. Ensemble, ils revisitent l'univers emblématique du Velvet Underground, créant une expérience sonore qui transcende le temps. Enfin, vous pourrez plonger dans le royaume enivrant du Dub avec "King Size Dub 23" d'Echo Beach, une compilation qui offre des versions captivantes de titres emblématiques. Alors, offrez-vous un mix éclectique de standards dézingués, détournements singuliers, et relectures bonifiées !
Welcome Natties to Episode 25 “Tales from an EMS" featuring SPECIAL guest David Shea! Join us as he tells us wild government secrets, wild EMS tales from the 80s and on regarding the likes of 2Pac and the real life character from the movie Casino! Happy Thanksgiving everyone, please remember to show us some love by liking, commenting and SUBSCRIBE!!All Socials: @thenaturalspod
Hour 2: Jason talked with David Shea and Tanya Spaulding from Shea Design about restaurant design on DeRusha Eats. Then, Rep. Peggy Scott on her bill to make a straw purchase of a gun a felony, and why it didn't become law this session.
Episode 641: July 15, 2023 playlist: Water Damage, "Fuck That : Reel 13 (excerpt)" (2 Songs) 2023 12XU Belbury Poly, "The Wrong Spot" (The Path) 2023 Ghost Box Hyunhye Seo, "Eel I (Excerpt)" (Eel) 2023 Room40 Umeko Ando, "Iuta Upopo" (Upopo Sanke) 2023 Pingipung Alabaster DePlume, "Did You Know (feat. Momoko Gill)" (Come With Fierce Grace) 2023 International Anthem Cabaret Voltaire, "Soul Vine [70 Billion People]" (Plasticity) 1992 Plastex David Shea, "XY Suite" (Una Nota Solo) 2005 Metta Editions / 2023 Room40 Not Waving, "Never Let Me Go" (The Place I've Been Missing) 2023 Ecstatic Brontez Purnell, "Girl From Ghost Town" (No Jack Swing) 2023 Dark Entries lovesliescrushing, "below and above" (psalms) 2022 self-released Email podcast at brainwashed dot com to say who you are; what you like; what you want to hear; share pictures for the podcast of where you're from, your computer or MP3 player with or without the Brainwashed Podcast Playing; and win free music! We have no tracking information, no idea who's listening to these things so the more feedback that comes in, the more frequent podcasts will come. You will not be put on any spam list and your information will remain completely private and not farmed out to a third party. Thanks for your attention and thanks for listening.
Stephanie [00:00:12]:Hello, everybody, and welcome to Dishing with Stephanie's dish. We talk to people that have written cookbooks or books or food adjacent things because I can't get enough about talking about food, and and today we have a great guest. She is julie joe sieverson. She is the author of Oldest Twin Cities a Guide to Historic Treasures. And I had read about this book, and I thought, oh, that's cool. I wonder if she has stuff in there about restaurants and breweries, because we have so much history in the Twin Cities. And indeed she does. Welcome to the program.Julie [00:00:47]:Thank you for having me here. This will be fun.Stephanie [00:00:50]:Yes, it will be fun. So how did you decide? Are you like a born and bred twin Citian, and how did you decide to undertake this project?Julie [00:00:59]:Yes, I'm a fourth generation Minnesotan, and I've lived in the Twin Cities most of my life. I first wrote a book called Secret Twin Cities a Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure, and that came out in 2020, arrived March, mid March, right when the cities were shutting down. So good timing on my part. I shoved them all in the corner for a couple of weeks because I thought, who's going to want to buy a travel guide right now?Stephanie [00:01:24]:Right?Julie [00:01:25]:It turned out okay for secret Twin cities. They had a lot of social distancing ideas in it, coincidentally. But anyway, all this Twin Cities evolved from that book. About a year later, the publisher asked if I'd like to write another one. And I really wanted to do one of more of a historic nature because I just think with COVID and the really tough year that the Twin Cities had in 2020, including the murder of George Floyd and the Civil uprising and businesses shutting down, burned down. I just felt like I needed a reason to fall back in love with the Twin Cities. And I was feeling a loss of community and a loss of connection. And for me to feel connected to the region I live in is very important to me. I need to feel part of the fabric. And so I just stopped focusing on enduring places in our midst and places that hung in there and have endured and have reopened, providing us continuity, kind of a comfort that was good for my soul to focus my energy there. So that's why I kind of went in this direction.Stephanie [00:02:43]:Well, and one of the selections in the book is the Oldest Best Bar, which is our friend Tony Zacardi, who bought it from our friend Lisa Hammer. I knew Lisa and Keith, and they had shepherded the bar, and then they sold it to Tony Zacardi. And it's from 1906.Julie [00:03:03]:Apparently.Stephanie [00:03:04]:It's an institution on Cedar Avenue. And you talk about sort of that pandemic and that coming back to life. Tony is a good example of someone that really he had just bought the bar and all of a sudden it has to close, and they're trying to hang on. And a lot of these bars and restaurants and distilleries really were in tough shape. So I was so glad that when we came out of the pandemic that Palmers has come out of it. And tell me a little bit about the history of Palmers in particular.Julie [00:03:40]:Yeah. And Tony really was he was really propelled into the national spotlight during that time. Yes.Stephanie [00:03:48]:He was an African American man who.Julie [00:03:51]:Owns this in the heart of he spray painted black owned business in hopes to protect his business, to deflect potential looters. And he was really a spokesperson and a comfort, I think, for the twin stage community during that time. We needed absolutely.Stephanie [00:04:10]:And the music community, too, because Palmer has had such a history in steeped in music.Julie [00:04:16]:Yeah. What a gem this place is. It's so unique, with an Islamic mosque on one end and then that iconic Mustachioed man against it on the other one. And as I write in the book, you rarely leave this place without a story to tell. Kind of rough edge place. Maybe not everybody's going to feel comfortable there, but you're very welcome there, no matter who you are. And you'll be invited to play a game of Scrabble or get into a conversation, unless you're a jerk. Because if you're a jerk, you're going to get plastered on a poster note on the back wall, and you're not going to be welcome there at all.Stephanie [00:05:00]:That's funny.Julie [00:05:02]:Yeah.Stephanie [00:05:02]:Another institution that is in downtown Minneapolis specifically, and I didn't realize that they had had a fire in 1989, but this was Glicks, the oldest downtown bar.Julie [00:05:20]:Yeah. Lots lots of damage. It seems like most of these places have endured fires over the years. Yeah.Stephanie [00:05:30]:You can imagine that. Yep.Julie [00:05:32]:Yeah, they they really came back from that. In fact, there was a moose in there. They have these animal heads mounted all throughout the restaurant. And the moose in the back room had been stolen from during a fraternity party there. And I think this group, whoever had stolen it, felt so bad because of fire that Reopening day, they anonymously returned it, leaning it against the front door. Welcome, everybody back. But yeah, my daughter was just there the other day. She's like I'm a glicks. I'm like, do you know that's in my book? No, I didn't even know that.Stephanie [00:06:05]:I had no idea either. Now, the Monte Carlo has been near and dear to my heart for some time, and my mom and dad got divorced, and my dad moved downtown. And that was really like, wow. Because we were suburban girls. And the first weekend my dad had us, he took us into this CD alley, and he went through this back door that had this weird sign above it and brought us in. And I thought he was bringing us into a pool hall. And I was like, oh, my gosh, my dad has really tipped over here, and it turned out to be the Loveliest bar inside. It was actually the Monte Carlo, and he was kind of a regular there. What's the historic nature of the Monte Carlo?Julie [00:06:47]:Yeah. Well, yeah, the hum of the neon sign is going to remain a constant in the North Loop Bar. It's really exquisite in there with this mirrored wall behind the bar. One's kind of an elegance to it, to it all. But the whole North Loop area, the warehouse district is where the Milky Way candy bars and cream of pasta and pop up toaster were invented. This was a real industrial place. The neighborhood has more than 60 buildings that are over a century old. A lot of them have been repurposed. Some of them. A few of them are rehearsal spaces for the Minnesota Opera, and a lot of them are faded. Business signs are repurposed. You see the old signs, ghost signs, sort of. But the Monte Carlo Bar and Grill have stood the test of time. It used to be mostly only for men, but then when it changed ownership, mr. Rimsick, who owns a number of places in the Twin Cities, he kind of turned it into a destination for all the patty, is a great happening place. Now, Beijing style wings, they're really famous for.Stephanie [00:08:06]:Yeah, the dry rubbed wings are my favorite. Yeah, a kind of funny one that I didn't expect would reach me and grab me, but it did. So I work on the Stone Arch Bridge festival and I curate a culinary market that happens underneath the Hennepin Avenue Bridge. And underneath that bridge, we have 38 ten x ten booths of vendors that produce Minnesota made food products. And as I was looking through your book, it's the oldest bridge relic at First Bridge Park, which is where I am during these two days of the festival from 1855. Underneath that bridge, there's these giant anchors, and I sit on those anchors. That's my chair during the two days of the festival. So I didn't realize they were so old.Julie [00:08:56]:Well, yeah, those don't date back to the very first bridge to cross the Mississippi River anywhere. Right there at St. Anthony Falls. I mean, prior to that bridge back in 1855, people were crossing over the falls to get to the other side. That first bridge didn't last real long, and then they created another one and another one. So anyway, these archaeological excavations revealed anchors from the original bridges, and so now they are under the Hennepin Bridge. Now you can see and sit on them if you want. There's plaque. So cool. Really interesting history at that park. Yeah. Right down from Melrose Park.Stephanie [00:09:42]:The oldest island venue in 1893 is the Nicolette Island Inn, which is still operating as a hotel, as a restaurant. It is a beautiful, gorgeous spot. If you ever just want to pop in for a drink or they have delicious food, too. Yeah, that's a great spot. And I didn't realize that David Shea was kind of responsible for bringing that back. He's designed so many restaurants in the Twin Cities.Julie [00:10:08]:Yeah. I didn't realize he was connected to that either until I started research. Talented guy. Yeah. That place I learned a lot about. I didn't really know a lot about that fire that had kind of spread through Nicholas Island and all northeast Minneapolis. A very ravishing fire, and only one of two structures, industrial structures, on the island to survive it. A fire started by some boys smoking. And so, again, these places that have endured. And at one point, it was a men's shelter, salvation army men's shelter. So I really and, you know, I can't help but continue then to learn about and read about Nicholette Island.Stephanie [00:10:52]:Right.Julie [00:10:53]:So many storied history there. Couple donkeys, Pearl and she. But I really focused on that island and my secret Twin Cities.Stephanie [00:11:01]:Who would have known that the oldest bowling alley was the Bryant Lake Bowl?Julie [00:11:08]:Yeah, I mean, that's a legendary spot in the Lin Lake neighborhood, and that's really evolved over the years. It used to be a Ford garage, and apparently it's haunted by a mechanic who was crushed by a car there. But at the heart of it is the eight lane bowling alley. Old school. But around it now is a really funky groovy restaurant that you never super funky for. A bowling alley and a cabaret with these red leather seats from Stillwater Junior High School, where you can go to all kinds of events there. And there's a really cool drone video that went viral in 2021 that they created to support businesses struggling through the pandemic. It's a cool right up our alley. You can Google it went viral. Yeah.Stephanie [00:11:57]:In 1964, Boca Chico became the oldest Mexican eatery, which is interesting, because I know that the Silva family opened El Burrito Mercado a little bit further down the street in the 70s, early seventy s. I didn't realize Boca Chica was that old. And it's still run by the family, isn't it?Julie [00:12:17]:Yeah, it sure is. Grandma Fria seasoned pork tamales are still on the menu. Yeah, this place was a really delightful surprise. Walking into you can go there after visiting the Wapisher Caves, the gangster tours there. That's a great place to go to afterwards. You just walk in and every wall tells a story of the family's heritage murals. But, yeah, Uramo Frias and Gloria Coronado, who's a petite, spunky lady, they fell in love and started this little place. She was actually linked to a dynasty, cultural dynasty in Minneapolis. Her parents owned the first Mexican restaurant in St. Paul, and then in Minneapolis called the Casa Coronado, but that has long closed.Stephanie [00:13:10]:And there's the oldest family Italian restaurant in St. Paul. Yuruso's.Julie [00:13:15]:Yeah. Yuruso's and giant meatballs. And again, that's family owned. Same family. And what I love about that place are giant murals of Sweet Hollow especially. It is located right across from Sweet Hollow. You would never know that across the street there is a hidden valley below street level. Right. We're former immigrant shanty town and in the book I give directions on how to get there because it's a little kind of windy but you can find it.Stephanie [00:13:50]:Yeah.Julie [00:13:51]:Yes.Stephanie [00:13:53]:When you were writing the book, what was one of your favorite discoveries?Julie [00:14:00]:Well, I fell in love with the New York Life Eagle. And that's a Summit overlook park in the Summit neighborhood. It overlooks the river valley.Stephanie [00:14:09]:I lived right there. It's right across from the University Club on Point of Land.Julie [00:14:16]:Maybe because of a mother. She's a mother. She's there taking her tail ons into a serpent, digging in there, protecting her nest of eaglets there in that pose she was almost discarded. She used to be on the third story entrance of the New York Life building in downtown St. Paul. And when that was removed, she really was nearly forgotten and discarded. And she was kind of put on a pedestal in front of a parking lot for a while until she found her new home here. And now she's in all her glory. There a nice spot while you're mansion goggling over mansions there in that area.Stephanie [00:14:54]:Yeah. I had no idea about Newman's being the oldest bar in the state.Julie [00:15:00]:Well, that's the big question because it's a tie between Newman's and the Spot Bar in St. Paul. The feud. I'm sure St. Spot fans will be mad at me for including Newman's, but I included the Spot bar in secret to the city, so I had to be fair. But those two kind of feud over. They both have very good reason but different reasons to want to claim that title. So yeah, Newman's is famous for their frog tank in the window.Stephanie [00:15:30]:What is the story of the frog tank? Do you know?Julie [00:15:34]:You ask people there and the Tank of Frogs has just been there as long as anybody can remember. It's just a tradition that they keep going and I guess the frogs have disappeared every now and then. One was found in a pitcher of beer. But this place has a hidden door behind the Tank of Frogs. It's only used for special events, but they used to hide have kind of speakeasy up there during prohibition and that's where you could speak up there and have a legal hooch. And there was like a phone that connected upstairs to the main bar to let the bartenders know when the cops were coming sniffing.Stephanie [00:16:13]:That's hilarious. Yeah. I love it. You go into all this detail like 1972. The oldest food co op is the Seward food Co op. Who knew that that was I mean, I don't know. The Twin Cities co op movement has been so strong, but who knew Seward was the first? I didn't. I thought the wedge was the first.Julie [00:16:36]:Yeah, no, they were really kind of the first, and now the most enduring. And what I didn't know was what a violent struggle the food co op went through in those early years. It sounds kind of like stuff going on these days with, you know, there was a takeover yeah. That tried to take over with steel bars and fire bombs, but they failed because there was such a difference of philosophy. And these were really some veteran radicals really disagreed with what they called the white bourgeois elitism. That's kind of how the opposing group.Stephanie [00:17:21]:Those bourgeois co op people.Julie [00:17:25]:And there's a new documentary about that called The Co op wars that was created in 2021. Super interesting to learn about the whole early Twin Cities.Stephanie [00:17:34]:Yeah, that sounds neat. Well, this is a great book. Your second book, Julie. Joe Sieverson Oldest Twin Cities a Guide to Historic Treasures. Are you already working on your third?Julie [00:17:44]:Not yet. Promoting this is full time right now.Stephanie [00:17:49]:Yes. Well, it's fun to visit with you and to hear the story and to just get more history about some of these great spots. Pick up the book and then take your own kind of historical tour, right?Julie [00:18:03]:Yes.Stephanie [00:18:04]:I love it. Thank you, Julie Joe. And thank you for highlighting some of our relics. Treasures, a fabric of a community is always about the history. That where you come from. Right. And it's good to be reminded of some of these great spots. I sat on that anchor all summer, last summer, and I never knew. So I love it. Thank you so much for joining us. I appreciate you.Julie [00:18:29]:Absolutely. Thank you.Stephanie [00:18:30]:All right, we'll talk soon. Okay, bye. Get full access to Stephanie's Dish Newsletter at stephaniehansen.substack.com/subscribe
Stephanie [00:00:12]:Hello, everybody, and welcome to Dishing with Stephanie's dish. We talk to people that have written cookbooks or books or food adjacent things because I can't get enough about talking about food, and and today we have a great guest. She is julie joe sieverson. She is the author of Oldest Twin Cities a Guide to Historic Treasures. And I had read about this book, and I thought, oh, that's cool. I wonder if she has stuff in there about restaurants and breweries, because we have so much history in the Twin Cities. And indeed she does. Welcome to the program.Julie [00:00:47]:Thank you for having me here. This will be fun.Stephanie [00:00:50]:Yes, it will be fun. So how did you decide? Are you like a born and bred twin Citian, and how did you decide to undertake this project?Julie [00:00:59]:Yes, I'm a fourth generation Minnesotan, and I've lived in the Twin Cities most of my life. I first wrote a book called Secret Twin Cities a Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure, and that came out in 2020, arrived March, mid March, right when the cities were shutting down. So good timing on my part. I shoved them all in the corner for a couple of weeks because I thought, who's going to want to buy a travel guide right now?Stephanie [00:01:24]:Right?Julie [00:01:25]:It turned out okay for secret Twin cities. They had a lot of social distancing ideas in it, coincidentally. But anyway, all this Twin Cities evolved from that book. About a year later, the publisher asked if I'd like to write another one. And I really wanted to do one of more of a historic nature because I just think with COVID and the really tough year that the Twin Cities had in 2020, including the murder of George Floyd and the Civil uprising and businesses shutting down, burned down. I just felt like I needed a reason to fall back in love with the Twin Cities. And I was feeling a loss of community and a loss of connection. And for me to feel connected to the region I live in is very important to me. I need to feel part of the fabric. And so I just stopped focusing on enduring places in our midst and places that hung in there and have endured and have reopened, providing us continuity, kind of a comfort that was good for my soul to focus my energy there. So that's why I kind of went in this direction.Stephanie [00:02:43]:Well, and one of the selections in the book is the Oldest Best Bar, which is our friend Tony Zacardi, who bought it from our friend Lisa Hammer. I knew Lisa and Keith, and they had shepherded the bar, and then they sold it to Tony Zacardi. And it's from 1906.Julie [00:03:03]:Apparently.Stephanie [00:03:04]:It's an institution on Cedar Avenue. And you talk about sort of that pandemic and that coming back to life. Tony is a good example of someone that really he had just bought the bar and all of a sudden it has to close, and they're trying to hang on. And a lot of these bars and restaurants and distilleries really were in tough shape. So I was so glad that when we came out of the pandemic that Palmers has come out of it. And tell me a little bit about the history of Palmers in particular.Julie [00:03:40]:Yeah. And Tony really was he was really propelled into the national spotlight during that time. Yes.Stephanie [00:03:48]:He was an African American man who.Julie [00:03:51]:Owns this in the heart of he spray painted black owned business in hopes to protect his business, to deflect potential looters. And he was really a spokesperson and a comfort, I think, for the twin stage community during that time. We needed absolutely.Stephanie [00:04:10]:And the music community, too, because Palmer has had such a history in steeped in music.Julie [00:04:16]:Yeah. What a gem this place is. It's so unique, with an Islamic mosque on one end and then that iconic Mustachioed man against it on the other one. And as I write in the book, you rarely leave this place without a story to tell. Kind of rough edge place. Maybe not everybody's going to feel comfortable there, but you're very welcome there, no matter who you are. And you'll be invited to play a game of Scrabble or get into a conversation, unless you're a jerk. Because if you're a jerk, you're going to get plastered on a poster note on the back wall, and you're not going to be welcome there at all.Stephanie [00:05:00]:That's funny.Julie [00:05:02]:Yeah.Stephanie [00:05:02]:Another institution that is in downtown Minneapolis specifically, and I didn't realize that they had had a fire in 1989, but this was Glicks, the oldest downtown bar.Julie [00:05:20]:Yeah. Lots lots of damage. It seems like most of these places have endured fires over the years. Yeah.Stephanie [00:05:30]:You can imagine that. Yep.Julie [00:05:32]:Yeah, they they really came back from that. In fact, there was a moose in there. They have these animal heads mounted all throughout the restaurant. And the moose in the back room had been stolen from during a fraternity party there. And I think this group, whoever had stolen it, felt so bad because of fire that Reopening day, they anonymously returned it, leaning it against the front door. Welcome, everybody back. But yeah, my daughter was just there the other day. She's like I'm a glicks. I'm like, do you know that's in my book? No, I didn't even know that.Stephanie [00:06:05]:I had no idea either. Now, the Monte Carlo has been near and dear to my heart for some time, and my mom and dad got divorced, and my dad moved downtown. And that was really like, wow. Because we were suburban girls. And the first weekend my dad had us, he took us into this CD alley, and he went through this back door that had this weird sign above it and brought us in. And I thought he was bringing us into a pool hall. And I was like, oh, my gosh, my dad has really tipped over here, and it turned out to be the Loveliest bar inside. It was actually the Monte Carlo, and he was kind of a regular there. What's the historic nature of the Monte Carlo?Julie [00:06:47]:Yeah. Well, yeah, the hum of the neon sign is going to remain a constant in the North Loop Bar. It's really exquisite in there with this mirrored wall behind the bar. One's kind of an elegance to it, to it all. But the whole North Loop area, the warehouse district is where the Milky Way candy bars and cream of pasta and pop up toaster were invented. This was a real industrial place. The neighborhood has more than 60 buildings that are over a century old. A lot of them have been repurposed. Some of them. A few of them are rehearsal spaces for the Minnesota Opera, and a lot of them are faded. Business signs are repurposed. You see the old signs, ghost signs, sort of. But the Monte Carlo Bar and Grill have stood the test of time. It used to be mostly only for men, but then when it changed ownership, mr. Rimsick, who owns a number of places in the Twin Cities, he kind of turned it into a destination for all the patty, is a great happening place. Now, Beijing style wings, they're really famous for.Stephanie [00:08:06]:Yeah, the dry rubbed wings are my favorite. Yeah, a kind of funny one that I didn't expect would reach me and grab me, but it did. So I work on the Stone Arch Bridge festival and I curate a culinary market that happens underneath the Hennepin Avenue Bridge. And underneath that bridge, we have 38 ten x ten booths of vendors that produce Minnesota made food products. And as I was looking through your book, it's the oldest bridge relic at First Bridge Park, which is where I am during these two days of the festival from 1855. Underneath that bridge, there's these giant anchors, and I sit on those anchors. That's my chair during the two days of the festival. So I didn't realize they were so old.Julie [00:08:56]:Well, yeah, those don't date back to the very first bridge to cross the Mississippi River anywhere. Right there at St. Anthony Falls. I mean, prior to that bridge back in 1855, people were crossing over the falls to get to the other side. That first bridge didn't last real long, and then they created another one and another one. So anyway, these archaeological excavations revealed anchors from the original bridges, and so now they are under the Hennepin Bridge. Now you can see and sit on them if you want. There's plaque. So cool. Really interesting history at that park. Yeah. Right down from Melrose Park.Stephanie [00:09:42]:The oldest island venue in 1893 is the Nicolette Island Inn, which is still operating as a hotel, as a restaurant. It is a beautiful, gorgeous spot. If you ever just want to pop in for a drink or they have delicious food, too. Yeah, that's a great spot. And I didn't realize that David Shea was kind of responsible for bringing that back. He's designed so many restaurants in the Twin Cities.Julie [00:10:08]:Yeah. I didn't realize he was connected to that either until I started research. Talented guy. Yeah. That place I learned a lot about. I didn't really know a lot about that fire that had kind of spread through Nicholas Island and all northeast Minneapolis. A very ravishing fire, and only one of two structures, industrial structures, on the island to survive it. A fire started by some boys smoking. And so, again, these places that have endured. And at one point, it was a men's shelter, salvation army men's shelter. So I really and, you know, I can't help but continue then to learn about and read about Nicholette Island.Stephanie [00:10:52]:Right.Julie [00:10:53]:So many storied history there. Couple donkeys, Pearl and she. But I really focused on that island and my secret Twin Cities.Stephanie [00:11:01]:Who would have known that the oldest bowling alley was the Bryant Lake Bowl?Julie [00:11:08]:Yeah, I mean, that's a legendary spot in the Lin Lake neighborhood, and that's really evolved over the years. It used to be a Ford garage, and apparently it's haunted by a mechanic who was crushed by a car there. But at the heart of it is the eight lane bowling alley. Old school. But around it now is a really funky groovy restaurant that you never super funky for. A bowling alley and a cabaret with these red leather seats from Stillwater Junior High School, where you can go to all kinds of events there. And there's a really cool drone video that went viral in 2021 that they created to support businesses struggling through the pandemic. It's a cool right up our alley. You can Google it went viral. Yeah.Stephanie [00:11:57]:In 1964, Boca Chico became the oldest Mexican eatery, which is interesting, because I know that the Silva family opened El Burrito Mercado a little bit further down the street in the 70s, early seventy s. I didn't realize Boca Chica was that old. And it's still run by the family, isn't it?Julie [00:12:17]:Yeah, it sure is. Grandma Fria seasoned pork tamales are still on the menu. Yeah, this place was a really delightful surprise. Walking into you can go there after visiting the Wapisher Caves, the gangster tours there. That's a great place to go to afterwards. You just walk in and every wall tells a story of the family's heritage murals. But, yeah, Uramo Frias and Gloria Coronado, who's a petite, spunky lady, they fell in love and started this little place. She was actually linked to a dynasty, cultural dynasty in Minneapolis. Her parents owned the first Mexican restaurant in St. Paul, and then in Minneapolis called the Casa Coronado, but that has long closed.Stephanie [00:13:10]:And there's the oldest family Italian restaurant in St. Paul. Yuruso's.Julie [00:13:15]:Yeah. Yuruso's and giant meatballs. And again, that's family owned. Same family. And what I love about that place are giant murals of Sweet Hollow especially. It is located right across from Sweet Hollow. You would never know that across the street there is a hidden valley below street level. Right. We're former immigrant shanty town and in the book I give directions on how to get there because it's a little kind of windy but you can find it.Stephanie [00:13:50]:Yeah.Julie [00:13:51]:Yes.Stephanie [00:13:53]:When you were writing the book, what was one of your favorite discoveries?Julie [00:14:00]:Well, I fell in love with the New York Life Eagle. And that's a Summit overlook park in the Summit neighborhood. It overlooks the river valley.Stephanie [00:14:09]:I lived right there. It's right across from the University Club on Point of Land.Julie [00:14:16]:Maybe because of a mother. She's a mother. She's there taking her tail ons into a serpent, digging in there, protecting her nest of eaglets there in that pose she was almost discarded. She used to be on the third story entrance of the New York Life building in downtown St. Paul. And when that was removed, she really was nearly forgotten and discarded. And she was kind of put on a pedestal in front of a parking lot for a while until she found her new home here. And now she's in all her glory. There a nice spot while you're mansion goggling over mansions there in that area.Stephanie [00:14:54]:Yeah. I had no idea about Newman's being the oldest bar in the state.Julie [00:15:00]:Well, that's the big question because it's a tie between Newman's and the Spot Bar in St. Paul. The feud. I'm sure St. Spot fans will be mad at me for including Newman's, but I included the Spot bar in secret to the city, so I had to be fair. But those two kind of feud over. They both have very good reason but different reasons to want to claim that title. So yeah, Newman's is famous for their frog tank in the window.Stephanie [00:15:30]:What is the story of the frog tank? Do you know?Julie [00:15:34]:You ask people there and the Tank of Frogs has just been there as long as anybody can remember. It's just a tradition that they keep going and I guess the frogs have disappeared every now and then. One was found in a pitcher of beer. But this place has a hidden door behind the Tank of Frogs. It's only used for special events, but they used to hide have kind of speakeasy up there during prohibition and that's where you could speak up there and have a legal hooch. And there was like a phone that connected upstairs to the main bar to let the bartenders know when the cops were coming sniffing.Stephanie [00:16:13]:That's hilarious. Yeah. I love it. You go into all this detail like 1972. The oldest food co op is the Seward food Co op. Who knew that that was I mean, I don't know. The Twin Cities co op movement has been so strong, but who knew Seward was the first? I didn't. I thought the wedge was the first.Julie [00:16:36]:Yeah, no, they were really kind of the first, and now the most enduring. And what I didn't know was what a violent struggle the food co op went through in those early years. It sounds kind of like stuff going on these days with, you know, there was a takeover yeah. That tried to take over with steel bars and fire bombs, but they failed because there was such a difference of philosophy. And these were really some veteran radicals really disagreed with what they called the white bourgeois elitism. That's kind of how the opposing group.Stephanie [00:17:21]:Those bourgeois co op people.Julie [00:17:25]:And there's a new documentary about that called The Co op wars that was created in 2021. Super interesting to learn about the whole early Twin Cities.Stephanie [00:17:34]:Yeah, that sounds neat. Well, this is a great book. Your second book, Julie. Joe Sieverson Oldest Twin Cities a Guide to Historic Treasures. Are you already working on your third?Julie [00:17:44]:Not yet. Promoting this is full time right now.Stephanie [00:17:49]:Yes. Well, it's fun to visit with you and to hear the story and to just get more history about some of these great spots. Pick up the book and then take your own kind of historical tour, right?Julie [00:18:03]:Yes.Stephanie [00:18:04]:I love it. Thank you, Julie Joe. And thank you for highlighting some of our relics. Treasures, a fabric of a community is always about the history. That where you come from. Right. And it's good to be reminded of some of these great spots. I sat on that anchor all summer, last summer, and I never knew. So I love it. Thank you so much for joining us. I appreciate you.Julie [00:18:29]:Absolutely. Thank you.Stephanie [00:18:30]:All right, we'll talk soon. Okay, bye. Get full access to Stephanie's Dish Newsletter at stephaniehansen.substack.com/subscribe
David Shea, director of the Office of Charge Card Management at the General Services Administration joins host Mark Amtower on this week's Amtower Off Center to discuss the federal SmartPayprogram. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
David Shea, director of the Office of Charge Card Management at the General Services Administration joins host Mark Amtower on this week's Amtower Off Center to discuss the federal SmartPay program.
Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
David Shea is the town of Riverview's director of parks, recreation and community relations.
This week we talk to David Shea, who serves as co-chair of May Fair (see video embedded below), along with “Holy Smoker” George Wright. After two years of cancellations due to the pandemic, the hugely popular May Fair is back on—scheduled for Friday, May 6th (4 to 9 p.m.) and Saturday May 7th (9 a.m. to 6 p.m.). We talk to David about what May Fair's all about, including the organizations that benefit from it, what goes into organizing May Fair, what's on offer this year and also, ways that organizers are introducing new features for New Canaan's growing community of young families.
Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 0′00″ An Infant's Dream by Frits Wentink & Erik Madigan Heck on Safe Passage (Dekmantel) 1′00″ Glas by Mattheis on Het Jaar Rond (nousklaer) 4′10″ Opus by Shin Sasakubo on Sam Gendel & Shin Sasakubo (CARNET RECORDS) 7′00″ Arne's Theme by Keith Secola on Portals (Don Giovanni Records) 9′15″ Sol by David Shea on The Art of Memory (Room40) 12′20″ Ilu Neiu Kiigel by Kiri Uu on Creak-whoosh (Estonian, Ingrian and Votian song re-imagined in Australia by Olev Muska and Mihkel Tartu) (Stroom) 14′05″ L'oiseau by Lucía Fumero on L'oiseau - Single (Modern Obscure Music) 17′25″ The Way We Descend by Paule Perrier on The Way We Descend (arch) 20′18″ Human by UMAN on Chaleur Humaine (UMAN) 25′10″ Blue Bonnet of the Seven Stars by aspidistrafly on A Little Fable (KITCHEN. LABEL) 26′05″ November, 1st in Detroit by Slow Attack Ensemble on Soundscapes for the Emotional-Type Listener (Mystic Roses) 29′40″ Gebroken by Ranie Ribeiro on Het Jaar Rond (nousklaer) 32′05″ Keruu by Cucina Povera on Dalmarnock Tapes (Mappa Editions) 37′10″ Falling in the Waves (feat. James K) by Parris on Soaked in Indigo Moonlight (Can You Feel The Sun) 40′00″ A Choir of Angels by Frits Wentink & Erik Madigan Heck on Safe Passage (Dekmantel) 45′15″ Hey Who Really Cares (feat. Mr. Joy) by Blunt Chunks on Hey Who Really Cares (feat. Mr. Joy) - Single (Blunt Chunks) 48′30″ Seek Refuge (feat. Tenderlonious, Latarnik & Vox Humana) by Jaubi on Nafs at Peace (feat. Latarnik & Tenderlonious) (Jaubi & Astigmatic Records) 51′35″ Blueblack Tomb (Prod. by Andi Toma) by Sissi Rada on Nanodiamond (Kryptox) 56′25″ Oedipa Maas y los Àtomos by Bassæ on Kiosque of Arrows 2 (Bureau B) 59′40″ Manantial by Azulina on La eternidad (Pedro Canale) 63′00″ On the Mountain Realm by Jonny Nash & Ana Stamp on There Up, Behind the Moon (Melody As Truth) 67′00″ Sit Around the Fire by Jon Hopkins, Ram Dass & East Forest on Music for Psychedelic Therapy (Domino Recording Co Ltd) 72′00″ Liminal by Priori on Your Own Power (Naff under exclusive license to Courage Holdings Inc.) 77′00″ Ever New (Kelsey Lu's Transportation) by Beverly Glenn-Copeland on Keyboard Fantasies Reimagined (Transgressive Records Ltd) 86′45″ Loop Against Anxiety by Rhode & Brown on Good Things Come To Those Who Fade (Slam City Jams) 90′10″ Koishiteiruchocho (feat. Michel Jun Collet) by Nick Foglia on Paradisia Vol. ∞ (Gang of Ducks) 94′30″ Yob (Xmas Dub) by Kornél Kovács on Studio Barnhus Xmas 2021 compilation (Studio Barnhus) 96′54″ A Joy Forever by ELWD on A Joy Forever - Single (ELWD) 99′20″ Satriale's by FOANS on Gateway (100% silk) 102′25″ Sammen by En Anden on Giv Besked (oen records) 105′00″ Lotus Bass by Aroma Pitch on Interlife (Public Possession) 109′40″ Liv by Lattice on Body of Water (air miles) 116′15″ Merry Mrsms by Shakarchi & Stranéus on Studio Barnhus Xmas 2021 compilation (Studio Barnhus) Check out the full archives on the website.
En el PostPodcast de esta semana: - Latigazos elitistas - David Shea y Jaf - Eloy Martín en busqueda y captura - Detalles técnicos - Hasta del Basun se puede sacar algo positivo - Vuestros comentarios Nuestra web: https://www.cepeceros.com Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/cepecerospodcast
"I was trying to reflect the colour brown" What we have been listening to: 00:01:07: Alessia Cara - In the Meantime 00:04:06: Miyauchi Yuri 00:10:53: Maximum the Hormone - Bu-ikikaesu 00:15:18: The National - Juicy Sonic Magic 00:22:26: News 00:29:02: Our Autumn Playlists Playlist on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4b1bwIIu7KCLOY0cgs1Rkk?si=b585273bb0664494 James' playlist: Rob Scallon - Rain Billie Eilish - Billie Bossa Nova Eric Clapton - Circus American football - The Summer Ends Erik Satie - Gymnopedie No.1 B5 - บางสิ่ง [Bang Sing] Miyauchi Yuri - Xalk_ Dom Mino' - Amelia Nils Frahm - My Friend The Forest Jess' playlist: Mitski - Fireworks Teenage Fanclub - I'm In Love Animal Collective - Man of Oil Flying Lotus - Golden Axe (Maida Vale Session) Blur - This Is a Low The Stone Roses - Elizabeth My Dear Van Morrison - Moondance Björn Olsson - Annika Elbow - the birds Will's playlist: King Krule - Alone, Omen 3 (Live) Space Afrika - B£E (feat. Blackhaine) Ben Seretan - 11pm Sudden Thunderstorm George Riley - power David Shea & Scanner - ...for… Wednesday - Cody's Only (Audiotree Live Version) Modest Mouse - Paper Thin Walls (Live at The Social) The Replacements - Can't Hardly Wait (Live 1991) Broken Social Scene - It's All Gonna Break (Live at Third Man Records) Tom's playlist: Seasons - Future Islands Juggernaut - Guy Garvey Long Island City - Mary Spender Wilder Mind - Mumford and Sons Which Way Home - David Ryan Harris you didn't even make the bed - PRONOUN It's Just the Night - I Am Kloot If Not Now… - Tracy Chapman Here We Are - Kenny G Cemeteries of London - Coldplay 01:04:40 Upcoming releases this week Personnel Jess - Spooky Costumes James - Leaf Clean Up Will - Umbrellas Tom - Window watching
Die Brainwashed - Radio Edition ist eine einstündige Show mit Musik von den Künstlern und Labels auf Brainwashed.com. 1. Xiu Xiu, "Sad Mezcalita" (OH NO) 2021 Polyvynil 2. Karate, "Gasoline" (Karate) 1995 Southern / 2021 Numero Group 3. Beatriz Ferreyra, "MurmureIn" (Souvenirs Caches / Innermost) 2021 Persistence of Sound 4. David Shea, "The shape of the land" (The Thousand Buddha Caves) 2021 Room40 5. Stereo Total, "Anti Love Song" (Anti Love Song) 2009 Kill Rock Stars 6. Maja S. K. Ratkje, "Harstad C" (Vannstand) 2021 Motvind 7. Mats Erlandsson, "Famous Last Names" (4-Track Guitar Music) 2018 XKatedral / 2021 Vaagner 8. Merope, "Bitinelis" (Salos) 2021 Stroom TV 9. Himukalt, "I No Longer Belong" (Between My Teeth) 2018 Several Minor Promises / 2021 Helen Scarsdale Agency 10. Sweeney, "Sometimes The Rain" (Misery Peaks) 2021 Sound In Silence 11. Giovanni Di Domenico, "Soft On Demand" (Downtown Ethnic Music) 2021 Die Schachtel 12. Celer, "XI" (The Past? That.) 2021 Two Acorns * Sendung vom 4. April 2021 # Brainwashed - Radio Edition Email podcast at brainwashed dot com to say who you are; what you like; what you want to hear; share pictures for the podcast of where you're from, your computer or MP3 player with or without the Brainwashed Podcast Playing; and win free music! We have no tracking information, no idea who's listening to these things so the more feedback that comes in, the more frequent podcasts will come. You will not be put on any spam list and your information will remain completely private and not farmed out to a third party. Thanks for your attention and thanks for listening. * http://brainwashed.com
SOLENOÏDE, émission de 'musiques imaginogènes' diffusée sur 30 radios dans le monde
Solénoïde (10.05.2021) - Accédez au monde scintillant des musiques atmosphériques ! Dans cette nouvelle épopée, vous évoluerez dans des environnements semés de motifs oniriques comme d'échos fantastiques. Cette expérience immersive est mise en son par des artistes venus notamment d'Allemagne, d'Australie, de Norvège ou de Géorgie...
Episode 04 - The OceanVision Project was the OSC's very first project and has since achieved some exciting milestones as they develop new technologies for high resolution seafloor imaging & mapping, and drawing significant interest globally. Hosted by OSC's Andy Stone, with guest David Shea, this episode dives into the latest on the OceanVision Project.
Episode 513: April 4, 2021 playlist: Xiu Xiu, "Sad Mezcalita" (OH NO) 2021 Polyvynil Karate, "Gasoline" (Karate) 1995 Southern / 2021 Numero Group Beatriz Ferreyra, "MurmureIn" (Souvenirs Caches / Innermost) 2021 Persistence of Sound David Shea, "The shape of the land" (The Thousand Buddha Caves) 2021 Room40 Stereo Total, "Anti Love Song" (Anti Love Song) 2009 Kill Rock Stars Maja S. K. Ratkje, "Harstad C" (Vannstand) 2021 Motvind Mats Erlandsson, "Famous Last Names" (4-Track Guitar Music) 2018 XKatedral / 2021 Vaagner Merope, "Bitinelis" (Salos) 2021 Stroom TV Himukalt, "I No Longer Belong" (Between My Teeth) 2018 Several Minor Promises / 2021 Helen Scarsdale Agency Sweeney, "Sometimes The Rain" (Misery Peaks) 2021 Sound In Silence Giovanni Di Domenico, "Soft On Demand" (Downtown Ethnic Music) 2021 Die Schachtel Celer, "XI" (The Past? That.) 2021 Two Acorns Email podcast at brainwashed dot com to say who you are; what you like; what you want to hear; share pictures for the podcast of where you're from, your computer or MP3 player with or without the Brainwashed Podcast Playing; and win free music! We have no tracking information, no idea who's listening to these things so the more feedback that comes in, the more frequent podcasts will come. You will not be put on any spam list and your information will remain completely private and not farmed out to a third party. Thanks for your attention and thanks for listening.
Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 0′00″ Let's Go Swimming (live 6/24/84) by Arthur Russell on Sketches for World of Echo June 25 1984 Live At Experimental Intermedia (Audika) 6′54″ Kajri Dadra by Ustad Bismillah Khan on Shehnai Samrat (T-Series) 16′14″ This Was The Only Spot That Was Green by Che Chen & Robbie Lee on The Spectrum Does (audioMER) 19′29″ Set-2-2 (excerpt) by Anthony Braxton on Anthony Braxton – Past, Present, Future: Selections From The Tri-Centric Foundation Archives Vol. 2 (New Braxton House) 23′44″ Hoy Polloy III by Caldwell/Tester on Live Times 2.1 (Medium Sound) 30′00″ Inveterate Observatories by Andrew Tuttle & Padang Food Tigers on A Cassowary Apart (Bedroom Suck Records) 34′55″ Curtain by Gunn-Truscinksi Duo on Soundkeeper (Three Lobed Recordings) 39′11″ The Hall of Mirrors in the Palace at Versailles by John Cale & Terry Riley on Church of Anthrax (Columbia Records) 47′02″ The shape of the land by David Shea on The Thousand Buddha Caves (Room40) 54′02″ Hello Stranger by Julia Holter on Loud City Song (Domino) Check out the full archives on the website.
SOLENOÏDE, émission de 'musiques imaginogènes' diffusée sur 30 radios dans le monde
Solénoïde (31.08.2020) - Compositeur américain établi en Australie, David Shea continue de tracer une voie singulière dans le paysage des musiques contemporaines avec la publication d'un album explicitement titré "Rituals". Rassemblant des matériaux sonores empruntés aux cultures bouddhiste et taoïste, cet opus nous tient en haleine pendant 75 mn, offrant une synthèse idéale entre visées contemplatives et explorations contemporaines. De quoi en faire haut la main le radiobalisage de notre mission 178 ! Mais d'autres artistes venus de la sphère radiovisuelle viendront surprendre ou émerveiller vos papilles auditives. Parmi eux, Ustad Sultan Khan et Warren Cuccurello, le curieux phénomène hongrois Laszlo Hortobagyi et le berlinois Kalipo.
David Shea, director of GSA's Center for Charge Card Management, joined host Mark Amtower for a lively discussion of the federal SmartPay program.
Composer-performer David Shea takes Speak Percussion and guzheng-player Mindy Wang on a journey through the sound worlds of the Silk Road.
Composer-performer David Shea takes Speak Percussion and guzheng-player Mindy Wang on a journey through the sound worlds of the Silk Road.
This week on IAQ Radio we are going to play Part Two of our interview from the Maine IAQ Council 2015 Northeast IAQ and Energy Conference. Bob Krell of Healthy Indoors Magazine and I interviewed some of the speakers at the event and we have both audio and video recordings to play back for our listeners and readers. The conference was a great success and every year they draw some of the top speakers in the industry. For part two this week we will be replaying our interviews with Sam Rashkin, Paula Schenck, MPH, David Shea, P.E. and Jack Springston, CIH, CSP, FAIHA. We will talk some building science, sampling vs. non sampling, mold and health, vapor intrusion and more! For those of you expecting our Brett Singer, PhD interview we had to push that back a week to accommodate a last minute change in Dr. Singer's plans. Sam Rashkin Chief Architect, Building Technologies Office in the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of Energy - Washington, D.C. As Chief Architect Mr. Rashkin's work includes leading DOE's world-class research program, Building America, and overseeing the DOE Zero Energy Ready Home voluntary labeling program for leading edge builders. In his prior position, he managed Energy Star for Homes since its start in 1996. He received his Bachelor of Architecture from Syracuse University; completed Masters of Urban Planning studies at New University; York and is a registered architect in California and New York. Paula Schenck, MPH Director of Indoor Environment & Health Programs, UConn Health - Farmington, CT Paula was part of a group that established the Center for Indoor Environments and Health at to UCONN on this objective. She developed multiple initiatives directed at improving indoor environments in schools and offices. At the UCONN Occupational Medicine clinic, Paula is called upon to provide guidance on environmental and/or workplace interventions as part of patient treatment. She also teaches environmental health at UCONN, instructs in the masters in public health program, is a seminar leader on asthma and environment and coordinates segments on occupational health in the medical school. David Shea, P.E. Sanborn Head & Associates - Concord, NH As a Principal Engineer with Sanborn, Head & Associates in Concord, New Hampshire, he is responsible for leading vapor intrusion and environmental remediation projects throughout the US and abroad. He has conducted vapor intrusion and mitigation assessments at sites involving more than hundreds of structures and millions of square feet. He holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Princeton University and a M.S. in Civil Engineering from M.I.T. He is a licensed professional engineer in 13 states. Jack Springston, CIH, CSP, FAIHA TRC Environmental Corporation - New York, NY Jack Springston has over 27 years of experience in industrial hygiene and occupational health. He has been a Certified Industrial Hygienist (CIH) since 1993, and is one of only approximately 50 active CIHs who also hold a sub-specialty certificate in Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ). Jack received a BS Degree in Environmental Science and Biology from LIU/Southampton College and a MS Degree in Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences from CUNY/Hunter College. He is a past-Chair of both the American Industrial Hygiene Association's (AIHA) Indoor Environmental Quality committee and the Bio-safety and Environmental Microbiology committee and is an AIHA Distinguished Fellow.
This week on IAQ Radio we are going to play Part Two of our interview from the Maine IAQ Council 2015 Northeast IAQ and Energy Conference. Bob Krell of Healthy Indoors Magazine and I interviewed some of the speakers at the event and we have both audio and video recordings to play back for our listeners and readers. The conference was a great success and every year they draw some of the top speakers in the industry. For part two this week we will be replaying our interviews with Sam Rashkin, Paula Schenck, MPH, David Shea, P.E. and Jack Springston, CIH, CSP, FAIHA. We will talk some building science, sampling vs. non sampling, mold and health, vapor intrusion and more! For those of you expecting our Brett Singer, PhD interview we had to push that back a week to accommodate a last minute change in Dr. Singer's plans. Sam Rashkin Chief Architect, Building Technologies Office in the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of Energy - Washington, D.C. As Chief Architect Mr. Rashkin's work includes leading DOE's world-class research program, Building America, and overseeing the DOE Zero Energy Ready Home voluntary labeling program for leading edge builders. In his prior position, he managed Energy Star for Homes since its start in 1996. He received his Bachelor of Architecture from Syracuse University; completed Masters of Urban Planning studies at New University; York and is a registered architect in California and New York. Paula Schenck, MPH Director of Indoor Environment & Health Programs, UConn Health - Farmington, CT Paula was part of a group that established the Center for Indoor Environments and Health at to UCONN on this objective. She developed multiple initiatives directed at improving indoor environments in schools and offices. At the UCONN Occupational Medicine clinic, Paula is called upon to provide guidance on environmental and/or workplace interventions as part of patient treatment. She also teaches environmental health at UCONN, instructs in the masters in public health program, is a seminar leader on asthma and environment and coordinates segments on occupational health in the medical school. David Shea, P.E. Sanborn Head & Associates - Concord, NH As a Principal Engineer with Sanborn, Head & Associates in Concord, New Hampshire, he is responsible for leading vapor intrusion and environmental remediation projects throughout the US and abroad. He has conducted vapor intrusion and mitigation assessments at sites involving more than hundreds of structures and millions of square feet. He holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Princeton University and a M.S. in Civil Engineering from M.I.T. He is a licensed professional engineer in 13 states. Jack Springston, CIH, CSP, FAIHA TRC Environmental Corporation - New York, NY Jack Springston has over 27 years of experience in industrial hygiene and occupational health. He has been a Certified Industrial Hygienist (CIH) since 1993, and is one of only approximately 50 active CIHs who also hold a sub-specialty certificate in Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ). Jack received a BS Degree in Environmental Science and Biology from LIU/Southampton College and a MS Degree in Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences from CUNY/Hunter College. He is a past-Chair of both the American Industrial Hygiene Association's (AIHA) Indoor Environmental Quality committee and the Bio-safety and Environmental Microbiology committee and is an AIHA Distinguished Fellow.
Programme de David SHEA pour webSYNradio : Rituals. avec les sons issus de traditions orientales et occidentales et des pièces de Luc Ferrari, David Shea, Aslan-Bek Samtiev, Quincy Jones, György Ligeti, Girija Devi, Pierre Boulez, Xumantra, Guadalcanal Et Savo, Giacinto Scelsi, Steve Reich, Bernard Parmegiani, Asha Bhosie & Mohd. Rafi, Erik Satie, Kecak Wira Natha, John Zorn …
Engaging the Asian City: Alternative Approaches to Urban Theory, Pedagogy, and Practice A Half-Day Symposium at the USC Sol Price School of Public Policy Engaging the Asian City: Student Presentations from the India & Japan Studio at USC Price featuring Jacki Chou, David Shea, Winnie Fong, and Steve Coulter Bringing together contributors of the recent 24-chapter volume The Emerging Asian City: Concomitant Urbanities & Urbanisms (Routledge 2012), and building upon Price School graduate student work from the India and Japan studios, this half-day symposium will spark a dialogue on how Asian cities are being shaped by different social, political and cultural phenomena compared to European and American ones, and why we should choose to read and ultimately engage with them differently. Many Asian cities are going through the same problems as Western ones: the debacles of single use zoning, FAR regulations, bureaucratic planning, urban disinvestment, sprawl, autopian dominance, etc. However, different governance structures, ambiguous administration and reinforcement, rapid population explosions, massive rural to urban migrations, extreme economic polarizations, large informal economies, the dominance of religion, the ambitions of a rising middle-class, the continuing perceived superiority of the West, all raise perplexing questions on how to intervene with what are essentially very different expectations of urban life in the first place. How Asian cities are manifesting the choices and decisions about their past and present, who in fact is making these choices, in turn for whom, and how they are being implemented, are crucial pointers to how we need to initiate alternative approaches to their deep histories, complex presents and ambitious futures. This discussion will seek to push the definitions of urban theory, pedagogy and practice beyond conventional and ordained readings - not as confident proposals for what a city ought to be, but careful engagements with existing and inherent mechanisms towards strategic change.
Episode 07, Some Assembly Required01 Lecture on Nothing - “Grab and pull”02 Escape Mechanism - “No reason”03 Public Works - “Noise”04 Steev Hise - “Retrofuturist trip-swing (gender politics mix)”05 People Like Us - “Sugar & splice”06 John Oswald - “White”07 Steinski and Mass Media - “Everything’s disappeared”08 Escape Mechanism - “Digital occasion”09 David Shea - "(untitled)"10 Silica-Gel - “Beauty bugaboo”11 Antediluvian Rocking Horse - “The premier needs protection”12 David Shea - "(untitled)"13 Laso Halo - “One Jesus”14 People Like Us - “Yodel bomber”Use this address, for your pod software:http://feeds.feedburner.com/some-assembly-required/JSpD
Episode 14, Some Assembly Required01 Your Host Bobby - “The rock critic”02 Repetophile - “Till the end of time”03 Dum Dum TV - "Couch Potato Resistance 7” (Side One)"04 Think Tank - “A knife and a fork”05 Greater Than One - “Now is the time”06 David Shea - "(untitled)07 People Like Us - “Morning, Pedro”08 Cut Chemist - “Lesson 4: The radio”09 David Shea - "(untitled)"10 Phil Milstein - “Opera (swivel ring)”11 Buttfinger - “Walking bible”12 Negativland - “U2 (special edit radio mix)”Use this address, for your pod software:http://feeds.feedburner.com/some-assembly-required/JSpD
Episode 21, Some Assembly Required01 Negativland - "Track 7 (debut album)"02 Silica-Gel - “You weird”03 Tom Recchion - “Mindless dread”04 Realistic - “Smells like teen disco”05 The Tape-beatles - “Dashed against the rock”06 People Like Us - “Kitten”07 David Shea and DJ Grazhoppa - “Hum hum hum”08 Jim Allenspach - “Friends”09 Wobbly - “Clawing your eyes out down to your throat”10 John Oswald - "(Untitled)"11 Laso Halo - “I’ll fight Max”12 The Tape-beatles - “Education of the will”13 Steinski - “Collage #7”14 Rik Rue - “Toy joy”15 Silica-Gel - “Basement”16 The Tape-beatles - “I can’t help you at all; sorry”17 Todd Polenberg - “Testing (in stereo)”18 People Like Us - “People like modern clothing”19 Jim Allenspach - “Garbage can”20 The Tape-beatles - “Different tool”21 Repetophile - “Tonight”22 Jim Allenspach - “Beat”23 Negativland - "Track 12 (debut album)"24 John Oswald - “Ten4”25 Wobbly - “Worry don’t thing”26 People Like Us - “Music of your own”27 Steinski - “Collage #6”28 The Tape-beatles - “Every man a king”29 David Shea and DJ Grazhoppa - “Old note 24/7”30 Todd Polenberg - “The devil?”31 Silica-Gel - “Pleasing”32 Laso Halo - “One Jesus”33 People Like Us - “Oh no”34 Silica-Gel - “Punishment”35 Negativland - “The way of it”36 John Oswald - “Tune”37 People Like Us - “Thank you”38 The Tape-beatles - “Earlids”39 Wobbly - “Oogamund”40 People Like Us - “Nobody does”41 Jim Allenspach - “People like um”42 David Shea and DJ Grazhoppa - “Tired”43 Negativland - "Track 20 (debut album)"44 Rik Rue - “Another fontana mix”45 Brindle Spork - “Mommy bomb”46 David Shea and DJ Grazhoppa - “Anytime pt. 2”47 Silica-Gel - “Hungry and greedy”48 John Oswald - “2 net”49 The Tape-beatles - “I can’t do it”50 People Like Us - “Doo dah tango”51 People Like Us - “Ready to fly?”52 The Tape-beatles - “The great inspiration”53 John Oswald - “Prelude”54 Silica-Gel - “Sum of your life”55 Steinski - “The xen to one ratio”56 The Tape-beatles - “Pens, pencils, stationary”57 Jim Allenspach - “They”58 Wobbly - “Christian music”59 People Like Us - “Ily”60 Negativland - "Track 14 (debut album)"Use this address, for your pod software:http://feeds.feedburner.com/some-assembly-required/JSpD
Episode 25, Some Assembly Required 01 Christian Marclay - “Maria Callas” 02 Philip Strong - “Plunderphile” 03 David Shea - (untitled) 04 Mr. Meridies - “Remember” 05 Lecture on Nothing - “Potato” 06 Stock, Hausen and Walkman - “Stripper” 07 Christian Marclay - “His master’s voice” 08 The Bran Flakes - “Fun land five” 09 Magwheels - “Impossible to accept” 10 DJ Shiro - “Science friction” 11 Negativland - “The gun and the bible” 12 Dktr - “Shut me up” 13 Double Dee and Steinski - “Jazz” 14 Surface Noise - “LTO (distended remix)” Use this address, for your pod software: http://feeds.feedburner.com/some-assembly-required/JSpD
This week on The Food Seen Michael spoke to restaurateurs Laura Shea and David Shea of applewood restaurant in Park Slope, Brooklyn. Michael spoke to them about the familial roots of applewood, and how the Sheys began work on raising a restaurant and a child at essentially the same time. They also discussed how a menu that changes daily makes being a cook (and a client) more interesting. This episode was sponsored by Whole Foods Market.
1. Bleek / Vicki Bennett, Copyright Copyleft Interview, Interview2. People Like Us, All Together Now, Blue Bayou3. Holtzkopf, Credit Card Ache, Memorabilia4. David Shea, Satyricon, Trimalchio5. Bleek / Mark Hosler, Copyright Copyleft Interview, Interview6. Negativland, No Business, My Favorite Things,