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Dr. Deb Muth 00:08What if the toxins in your food and water weren’t just harming our bodies, but rewriting the very code of human health? My guest today, MIT scientist Dr. Stephanie Sineff, has spent over a decade connecting the dots between environmental toxins, metabolic chaos, and neurological decline. You’ll want to hear every word of this conversation. You guys can put our, Serenity ad in here, and then I’ll do the standard intro.Welcome back to Let’s Talk Wellness Now, the show where we uncover the root causes of chronic illness, explore cutting-edge regenerative medicine, and empower you with the tools to heal. I’m Dr. Deb, your medical detective.And today, we’re diving into how environmental toxins and nutritional imbalances are silently shaping chronic disease patterns, from autoimmune disorders to neurodegenerative decline. And how we can take back control of our health. So, as usual, grab your cup of coffee, tea, or whatever helps you unwind, settle in, and let’s get started on your journey to deeper healing. So, Dr. Sunif, so glad to have you here. I can’t wait to have this conversation with you. We were just chatting off-camera a few seconds ago about what we’re going to chat about, but tell us a little bit about your background and how you got into this field of looking at toxins and mitochondria. Seneff 01:50Okay, yeah, my background is a bit eclectic, so it starts out with biology. I have an undergraduate degree in biology from MIT. My PhD is in electrical engineering and computer science, so that’s quite a switchover. And most of my career, I was writing computer code to train computers to talk to humans in a natural conversation… conversational interaction with computers. We were pioneers in that space. You can see that it has really taken off now. And actually, by 2006, 2007, I started to realize that the kind of work I did already then was getting compromised by the, by the emergence of AI. And I got concerned that, I wouldn’t be able to sustain the path I was on. And it’s happening now, of course, to the young… many people, young people today, are facing a crisis in computer science, because it used to be if you had skills in hacking code, you were good to go, you know, and that’s just not true anymore, so that’s another whole story, but anyway, I decided I needed to do something different, and I pivoted in a big way in 2007. managed to get the company that had been funding me, a Taiwanese company called Quanta Computers, And they,We’re willing to switch over to funding me to do research on health and toxic chemical exposures. Which was a miracle that they let… they let me switch over to that, and that was fantastic, 2007. So it’s been almost 20 years. that I’ve been looking for toxic chemical exposures and their association with human disease. And I focused initially on autism and heart disease, kind of for personal reasons, because I knew people who had, you know, who had those issues.But it led into a much, much bigger story, and I’m super excited about what’s happened over the last 20 years. It’s been a continual learning experience for me, and I’ve just kept broadening my space in biology, furiously reading papers as I discovered new concepts and trying to explore those. opening up new windows, and it’s just been a profusion of learning over the past 20 years, and I’ve published many papers at this point. Peer-reviewed papers on the topics of toxic chemical exposures and disease. Particularly, glyphosate is the one I really focused on, and I wrote the book, Toxic Legacy, how the weed killer glyphosate is Destroying Our Health and the Environment.That was published in 2021. So. Dr. Deb Muth 04:18So I’m sure you have a few thoughts about the administration wanting to bring that back to be made at home instead of China, right? Seneff 04:26I know, that’s so interesting. And actually, you know, he makes a point that I agree with, which is that we are relying on China. for importing a whole bunch of stuff that’s really toxic, and we’re pouring it all over our food supply, so China’s probably very happy to poison us, you know? Oh, absolutely. It’s kind of ironic that we’re doing that, and he makes a good point that we shouldn’t be relying on China for these chemicals that are poisoning us, but where he misses the point is he says, well, we just need to poison ourselves, you know? Rather than getting rid of that chemical, we need to really change the way we grow food.I think it’s the number one most important thing right now. in America is to change the way we grow food, and it has to be certified organic, regenerative. We need to focus on healing the soil, just as we have to heal the gut. I mean, we’ve really messed up the microbes in both the soil and the gut, and the consequences, as you can see, are a huge problem with human disease. Dr. Deb Muth 05:20They’re devastating. I mean, we have so much chronic illness and so much neurological disease these days, and just the rise of autism, it should be telling us that we’re doing something wrong, right? Seneff 05:31Absolutely. Dr. Deb Muth 05:32We have a problem. For those people who are listening that don’t understand what the term glyphosate is, can you explain that a little bit to them? Seneff 05:39Yeah, so it’s one of the many herbicides that we use. We use herbicides, fungicides, and insecticides in agriculture, all these poisons, and it kind of seems crazy to me that we would think it’s okay to pour poisons all over our food supply. I don’t understand why we think that’s fine.Yeah. You know, categorically. Glyphosate is supposed to be a wonderful chemical, because it’s an herbicide that kills all plants except for those that have been engineered to resist it. And supposedly is completely harmless to humans. And that’s what gets to be, you know, disbelief, because how can something so toxic to plants be harmless to humans? Just, how can it be? Dr. Deb Muth 06:14We haven’t been re-engineered like the seeds that they use from Monsanto, so how can it not affect us if it only affects everything but their seeds that they’ve modified to make grow beautifully under that condition? It doesn’t make any sense. Seneff 06:32Right, and of course, the critical thing they missed is that our gut microbes do have that pathway. It’s the chicken mate pathway that it disrupts. Really critical in all the plants, and in most of the microbes. In the soil and in the gut, and so it kills off the microbes as well as the plants, and when it kills off your gut microbes, you gotta watch out, because gut dysbiosis is a huge thing. And we’ve had so many papers coming out lately that Talking about the relationship between gut dysbiosis and all kinds of different diseases. Dr. Deb Muth 07:01Do you think that’s why we see so much gut dysbiosis these days? Seneff 07:04Oh, absolutely. I think it’s not just glyphosate, because we have lots of poisons that are messing up our gut microbes, but glyphosate is a really big one, because the shikimate pathway is essential for many of the microbes, and they use it to make essential nutrients for the host. So we get compromised as well, just because they can’t make those nutrients in that. Dr. Deb Muth 07:22It’s so… Seneff 07:22lies. Dr. Deb Muth 07:23so much harder today to treat people with gut issues than it was 25 years ago when I started. It was so much easier. And now, it’s, like, nearly impossible sometimes to get some of these people back to a good, healthy gut microbiome, no matter what you do, no matter how well they eat, and all the things that they do. It’s a struggle, for sure, compared to what it was 20 years ago. Seneff 07:44It’s interesting that you have that personal experience, because I think people like you really can see what’s happening. Dr. Deb Muth 07:49and appreciate. Seneff 07:50the difference between then and now. I, of course, as a child, autism was not something I knew about at all. Really, when I was a child. It didn’t exist, basically. I mean, it was so rare. And now, you know, everyone knows someone with autism, you know, pretty much. Dr. Deb Muth 08:08Autism and Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s seems to be just so much commonplace. Everybody knows somebody in their family that is affected by one of those disorders, if not multiples, and We tend to say it’s genetic, right? Well, there’s got to be a genetic… why wasn’t it genetic 50 years ago, or 100 years ago? But now, all of a sudden, it’s so prevalent in our environment that we’ve just become acceptable of it, and I think that’s wrong for us to do that. We shouldn’t be doing that. Seneff 08:38I know. I find it very interesting how quickly it appears that humans adapt to the new normal, you know? Dr. Deb Muth 08:44Yeah. Seneff 08:45It’s normal that you have, you know. 3% of the kids have autism, that’s normal, you know? It’s just like, no, it’s not. And also, of course, all the Alzheimer’s and dementia and Parkinson’s, as you mentioned, in the elderly, those are connected, because they’re all related to brain problems that are being caused by chemicals that are destroying the brain. Dr. Deb Muth 09:03Yeah. So, how does glyphosphate interact with our body’s ability to absorb those essential nutrients, like sulfur? Seneff 09:12Yeah, well, it’s… that’s a big… that’s a big question. I don’t know where to begin with that one. Glyphosate, you know, it’s a train wreck for the gut microbes, and then that causes the gut dysbiosis. The microbes are unable to produce adequate amounts of nutrients that are essential for the host. And as a consequence, the host cells get sick, you know, so the colonocytes get sick because they’re not getting adequate nutrition. Because the microbes can’t produce the nutrition they normally would produce. I think that’s a good summary of what’s going on. You get inflammation in the gut.And then the inflammation causes immune reactions, so you get the immune cells coming in, and they create inflammation, you know, it’s just like there’s a kind of a festering going on in there that’s really a train wreck for the whole system. Dr. Deb Muth 09:58Do we see different, results with things like this in Europe, where they’re not allowed to use a lot of these chemicals that we’re allowed to use here? Seneff 10:07Yeah, they are allowed, but it’s much, much less there. My friend, Tony Mitra got his government, Canada, to do a test… to do a big test of over 8,000 samples, food samples, to get… look for glyphosate. U.S. government doesn’t bother to test for glyphosate, because they consider it to be safe.We know it’s all over our food supply from work by people like Zen Honeycutt. My friend Zan Honeycutt of Moms Across America has really been on a mission to test all kinds of different food samples for glyphosate and finding it extensive in our food supply, in the school lunches. in the fast food restaurants and the food that’s fed to the Army. She’s done all these different studies, breast milk. Wines, you know, all the wines were contaminated, even the biodynamic, which are organic.Had small amounts of glyphosate, so it’s just like it’s all over the food supply. Canada did 8,000 samples. Tony Beecher finally got them to do that after many years of harassing them, and then he published the results in a book called Poison Foods of North America, because they found that they had imports from Europe, imports from Mexico, imports from the U.S, And basically, the U.S. and Canada came out way on top, as far as overall, the numbers were much higher in those two countries. And Mexico lined up with Europe, which was quite interesting to me. So, you know, you’re better off if you buy food from Mexico. Dr. Deb Muth 11:31Yeah, and I wouldn’t have thought that, I would have thought that was different. Seneff 11:34And I know you often think that Mexican food is not going to be as carefully regulated, and you might get some kind of, toxin. You don’t expect Mexican food to be healthier than American, but it is. Dr. Deb Muth 11:44Yeah. Yeah, can you talk a little bit about deuterium? What is deuterium? Seneff 11:51Okay, that’s a good place to start. Yeah, deuterium… I am absolutely fascinated with deuterium, and I believe that the team of researchers that I’m working with, we are on to something really huge. I’m super, super excited. I almost can’t contain my excitement with this, because once we started looking, it’s just like everything made so much sense. Everything kind of came together. In terms of metabolism, and disruptive metabolism, and all the stuff that’s going on in the gut. It really, really makes sense. Deuterium is heavy hydrogen. It’s a natural element. Hydrogen is the smallest element, the upper left corner of the periodic table. One proton and one electron, and it’s by far the most common atom in the universe.And in our body, as well, by far the most common atom in our body, and it’s involved in all the chemical reactions that take place. And so, you know, have carbohydrates. The hydrates is hydrogen, you know, in the word carbon, hydrogen, carbohydrates. And of course, carbohydrates are, you know, basic foods. So anyway, deuterium has an extra neutron. It’s just like carbon-14, so carbon-12, carbon-14 is a little bit heavier. It’s got 14 instead of 12. It has extra neutrons. So there are these kind of isotopes of various atoms, but hydrogen has hydrogen, deuterium, and tritium. Tritium has two extra neutrons. It’s very rare, and deuterium has one extra neutron, and it’s rare compared to hydrogen, but it’s not rare, because hydrogen’s so common. So it’s actually present in the blood at five times the level of calcium, for example. Dr. Deb Muth 13:24Oh. Seneff 13:25So it’s not rare, but it’s a very interesting atom that has caused us trouble in the mitochondria. Dr. Deb Muth 13:32Is it actually considered a toxin? Seneff 13:34It’s a natural element, you know. I mean, you have natural elements that are toxic, you know, like some of those metals, like mercury, for example, is a natural element, but it’s toxic, so it’s not a chemical, it’s not a chemical, you know, not made in the chemical lab. It’s just an atom. And it’s all over the universe. It’s not like you can avoid it, or you can, you know, you can’t get rid of it. It’s everywhere. And so it’s a natural part of biology, and our biology has evolved. to very, very clever ways to protect the mitochondria from deuterium. So the thing is, mitochondria have ATPase, which makes ATP, and ATP is the universal… it’s the energy source for the cell.ATP. It’s made in the mitochondria, very, very important, oxidative phosphorylation, you know, that’s sort of basic in biology. And, those ATPase pumps, depend upon hydrogen flowing through the pumps to generate, motor force to make the ATP.And they pile up the hydrogen inside an inner membrane space. They’re kind of cute. The mitochondria have this internal matrix in the hole, like a donut hole. The matrix is where a lot of activity is going on. And then there’s a membrane, but the membrane has both an outer membrane and an inner membrane. So there’s an intermembrane space where the mitochondria dump a lot of protons. They make… put lots and lots of protons in there, and then the protons naturally come out through basic… through basic physics, they come out, and the pumps are there to grab the energy as the protons come out. It’s quite cool. Go back into the matrix. the protons go back into the matrix. So what the body does is it tries to keep deuterons out of those… out of that intermembrane space. It tries really hard not to put deuterons in there. So deuterons are the equivalent of protons.You know, proteom is the normal hydrogen, and then deuterium is the… is the one with the extra neutron that makes it twice as heavy. So because it’s twice as heavy, it behaves very, very differently. It’s kind of like a big, bulky thing coming through the pumps, and it can clobber them. It can really mess them up.And the body knows that, and so the body has designed incredibly elegant mechanisms to keep the deuterium levels inside that inner membrane space as low as possible. the body obsesses on that. And once you realize that, all of a sudden, lots and lots of things make sense in terms of looking at biochemistry and what’s going on. All kinds of things that didn’t make sense before suddenly come. clear… clear… are motivated by this idea of avoiding deuterium in the inner membrane space. So it’s really, really fascinating biology. Dr. Deb Muth 16:08So does the glyphosate tend to increase the deuterium in that space, or does it disrupt it? Seneff 16:16It definitely increases it, and the reason why is because it disrupts the enzymes that manage it. And so, for example. So this, I have to get into hydrogen gas and microbial production of hydrogen gas, which is central to the story. And you know, people get gashy, they have, like, bloating and stuff, there’s a lot. Dr. Deb Muth 16:34echo. Seneff 16:34That’s because those gases that are being made by the microbes are unable to be brought back into organic matter. So normally the microbes make lots and lots of gas, and they start with hydrogen gas, and they make methane gas, they make hydrogen sulfide gas, and they make all these gases. And then they use those gases as reducing agents to come back and make organic matter. So they basically convert food into basic gases, like hydrogen and carbon dioxide, right? And then they take the carbon dioxide and hydrogen to convert it back into food. And the reason why they do that is because the process of making the gas tremendously strips out the deuterium. This is absolutely central, I think, to metabolism.And it’s not something very many people are aware of. The microbes make the hydrogen gas. And when they do that, they lose 80% of the deuterium, because the deuterium tends to stay in the aqueous space, because it’s too heavy. You just think of, you know, trying to lift out… if you’re twice as heavy, it’s a lot harder to get out of the liquid into the air. You know, so basically to make the gas. When you make the gas, you lose a lot of the deuterium. And that is super, super central, I think, to metabolism. Dr. Deb Muth 17:47So, if that’s what’s happening inside of there, it’s obviously creating metabolism issues. What does that mean for energy and mitochondrial health, then? Seneff 17:58Well, what happens is that the microbes are unable to make enough of those nutrients that are super for the host that have low deuterium. And a particular one that I have in mind is butyrate. And I don’t know if you know anything about butyrate. Dr. Deb Muth 18:10Yeah. Seneff 18:12But it’s a very healthy resource for the gut. The colonocytes lining the gut, 80% of their food is butyrate. They love butyrate, normally. But lots of people have butyrate deficiency in their gut. And that deficiency is due to the fact that the microbes can’t make the hydrogen gas, because when they make the hydro… or they can’t bring the hydrogen gas back in to make. Dr. Deb Muth 18:34Beautiful. Seneff 18:35Because a butyrate comes from the hydrogen gas that’s produced by the gut microbes. Dr. Deb Muth 18:39So, if we supplement with N-butyrate, does that help that process work better, or does it not really do much with the deuterium, then? Seneff 18:48Well, there’s a big question with supplements, and I’m really starting to appreciate this more. You know, I always like natural, right? Natural versus synthetic. And I think there’s a huge difference. For many of these supplements that are popular, there’s a huge difference between natural and synthetic. Yeah. And that big difference has to do with the level of deuterium, because if it’s made synthetically. It’s not going to be depleted in deuterium. So when you’re taking… and I don’t know butyrate, you have to go and look at how they manufacture it to see if it comes from natural or synthetic ingredients. It’s extremely interesting with… I’ve looked into some of these other nutrients that people like to take as supplements. Choline by tartrate is one that I really was fascinated with, because… and there are papers that show that if you take choline by tartrate as a supplement… so choline, of course, is a very important nutrient, a lot ofAre deficient, especially if they’re vegetarian. And choline bitartrate is a synthetic form of choline. And, choline bitartrate, if you take… the studies have shown There’s a beautiful study that had people who ate a bunch of eggs, you know, because eggs are high in choline, and then they had people who took choline by tartrate to get an equivalent amount of choline in their diet compared to the eggs, right? And the people who ate the eggs were fine, and the people who ate the choline bitartrate were not. They had a very big increase in a metabolite called trimethylamine oxide, TMAO. Dr. Deb Muth 20:13in the. Seneff 20:14in the blood. And TMAO is a risk factor for a huge number of diseases, you know, all the usual suspects, the diabetes, the cholesterol, the heart disease, cancer, all kinds of diseases. Dr. Deb Muth 20:26TMA over. Seneff 20:26is a very interesting molecule that’s been studied quite a bit recently. There’s a lot of papers on it. I don’t know if you’ve heard of it, TMAO . Dr. Deb Muth 20:32I have, yeah. Seneff 20:33Yeah, okay. Well, that one is a… it’s very, very interesting, and I have a paper that I’m trying to get published right now that I’m quite proud of that talks about all of this, but they found that when you eat the eggs and get the choline that way, you’re fine, but if you take the choline bichartrate, you’re not. You get all this TMAO. And the reason, I think, is because the microbes… the microbes make TMA from choline. the trimethylamine. Choline has a nitrogen atom with 3 methyls attached to it, and those methyls are going to be really low in deuterium. Because they’re part of the methylation pathway, which microbes make sure those methyls are low in deuterium. So all the whole methylation pathways, I think, is a distribution system to deliver low deuterium nutrients throughout the body, not just in the gut. You know, and the body has all these ways of hooking methyls onto things. Dr. Deb Muth 21:26and take it. Seneff 21:26them off, and when it takes them off, it metabolizes them in the mitochondria, delivering to them low deuterium nutrient. So, so when you take the choline bitartrate, and it’s not low deuterium, what happens is you end up with molecules of TMA, trimethylamine, that have deuterium in them. And when you have those, they won’t… the microbes won’t metabolize them, they won’t turn them back into hydrogen. You know, deuterium depleted hydrogen, they won’t do it. So they stick around, the TMA doesn’t get metabolized, and then it gets sent to the liver, the liver turns it into TMAO, and now you’ve got your problem. And I think TMAO is a marker for deuterium overload in the mitochondria, in the methylation pathways. Dr. Deb Muth 22:06That’s interesting that you’re talking about that. I belong to a group, and we’ve been researching plosmalogen therapy, and one of the supplements that was created was created with a large amount of phospholine. And,And by itself, when we used the phospholine in one of our formulations, it wasn’t bad, but when they doubled the dose and they were putting it in all of their formulations, people were starting to see the TMO levels go up. And we were trying to figure out, like, what’s happening here. It wasn’t everybody, but it was a good chunk of people, enough for us to say, hey, something needs to change here. We need to take out this phospholine, or not use as much of it. But now this explains exactly why the TAMO was going up. And if those people do have a lot of deuterium, maybe why we saw some people have a problem with it, but not everybody had a problem with it. Seneff 22:57It depends on their microbes. If their microbes are healthy enough to be able to metabolize the TMA, they’re fine. And the microbes produce the TMA, and then they metabolize it. And they’re doing that to generate more deuterium-depleted nutrients. They’re constantly trying to come up with new nutrients that are deuterium-depleted to feed to the host. I mean, they’re really obsessed with it. And they do a good job, normally, but they get so messed up by all these chemicals, and not just glyphosate, of course, all the chemicals in our food and in the air, it’s a mess, you know? Dr. Deb Muth 23:26It’s amazing the body works as well as it does. Seneff 23:28It is. I really am surprised that we don’t have more people who are super sick, you know? Dr. Deb Muth 23:33Exactly. Seneff 23:33Not for sure, but some of us are doing okay with it, you know? Dr. Deb Muth 23:37Yeah, exactly. So when we have this high level of deuterium, high levels of glyphosphate, what is that going to do to the body’s energy stores? Seneff 23:46well, it’s going to wreck the mitochondria, and then you’re going to get chronic fatigue. I mean, I think chronic fatigue syndrome, to me, is a very clear example of mitochondrial damage due to excess deuterium. I think that can completely explain that disease. Dr. Deb Muth 24:01Do you think this high level of deuterium is causing people to see more neurological diseases as well, like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s? It’s fueling it. Seneff 24:11Absolutely, because the brain has so much dependence on energy, you know, the brain uses a lot of energy, and they need really healthy mitochondria. They have… neurons have lots of mitochondria. Neurons and muscle cells really, you know, are loaded up with mitochondria, and both of them get injured when they don’t have a… when they can’t keep deuterium out of the mitochondria. Dr. Deb Muth 24:30The cells. Seneff 24:31get injured by all the reactive oxygen the mitochondria are producing, which the ATPase pumps, once they’re getting contaminated with all that deuterium, they start spewing out reactive oxygen. It kills the mitochondria, then it kills the cell, then it kills the brain, you know? It’s like a progression. It really starts with the mitochondrial damage, and then the cell dies, and once the neurons start dying, then the brain dies, you know, and you’ve got all. symptoms. Dr. Deb Muth 24:55So can we measure deuterium like we can glyphosphate in the body? Seneff 24:59You can, yes. In fact, you can do a saliva test and send it off and get the… get a level of how much deuterium is in your saliva. I would love to know more… in more detail how much deuterium is in different parts of the body, because that’s really interesting to me from my studies. What I’m suspecting is that the body… so the cells actually dump deuterium outside the cell. That to try to get as little deuterium as possible inside the cell. And within the cell, they’re trying to get as little deuterium as possible inside the mitochondria. So there’s layers of trying to get rid of the deuterium. And so the convenient thing is to dump the deuterium outside the cell. So there’s a lot of deuterium in bones, for example, probably in your skin, you know, any kind of exterior materials. And the sort of glycocalyx, so there’s this glycocalyx that lines all the blood vessels.That’s these sort of complicated sulfated sugar… complex sugar molecules that, that create gelled water. this gets into Gerald Pollack’s work. I don’t know if you know anything about Gerald Pollack and gelled water, but that’s quite a fascinating field all by itself. But it has to do with really fascinating stuff, because Gerald Pollack talks about battery… a battery being created by the gel. He’s done a lot of research on gelled water. You know, like jello, for example.And you put some powder, you put some hot boiling water, you let it sit, it gels up. It’s mostly water, but it’s a funny phase of water. It’s called the… he calls it the fourth phase of water. He wrote a whole book about that. Gerald Pollack did. And, it’s a gel phase, so water has, you know, the liquid, the solid, the gas, and then the gel. And… and most of the water in our body is gel, is gelled. And especially all the water lining the blood vessels. The blood vessels have free-flowing blood in the middle, right? Dr. Deb Muth 26:46in the long… Seneff 26:46the edges, they have this gelled water that’s created by these sulfated glycos… I mean, the glycans, they’re called, complicated word there, but… They create the gelled water, and the gel… actually, what Pollock showed is that the gel becomes negatively charged, and it pushes out protons. It pushes protons out into the blood. And it ends up being negatively charged because of that. And it creates a battery, and that battery is a source of energy, so… so you can think of, the gel as being like a battery supporting the entire body. All the gel in the blood is a battery. It’s a giant battery. And when you get exposed to sunlight, the gel grows in volume by a lot, and so when the gel gets bigger, it gets to be a bigger battery, and it’s capturing the energy in sunlight. It’s like a solar panel. your skin is like a solar panel, capturing the energy in the sunlight and converting it into this energy in that gel that pushes out those protons. And the cool thing is the deuterons tend to stay behind Because, It’s a little bit of interesting physics here when you have a water molecule, could have one deuterium, one hydrogen, and an oxygen. Water is H2O, right? It would be HDO, one hydrogen, one deuterium, and oxygen, right? HGO. And when you separate that out, usually you separate water out into OH- and H+, right, when you pull it apart into ions. OH minus and H+. Well, what happens here is that the deuterium sticks harder to the oxygen. than the hydrogen does. So you get OD- and H+. more often than OH minus and D+. Dr. Deb Muth 28:22So you have a lot fewer D pluses inside that gel. Seneff 28:26And the H pluses go out into the blood, and the D pluses are… the Ds are stuck to the oxygen, so they don’t go out. So you end up, actually, that’s a sort of distillation process that pulls healthy proteins out of the gel, into the blood. And that makes the blood levels of deuterium lower. Do you see what I’m saying? The deuterium gets trapped in the gel. And the deuterium gets trapped in bone in the same way, in the bone, in the skin. So the body’s trying to keep the deuterium out of the cell, and within the cell, it’s trying to keep it out of the mitochondria, and actually out of all the organelles, not just the mitochondria. So it’s… there’s a whole… Metabolism cannot be explained without looking at deuterium. Dr. Deb Muth 29:07Yeah, so if deuterium’s getting trapped in the bone, much like lead does, does it take up space where we can’t have calcium, and then it leads to more osteoporosis as well? Seneff 29:16I don’t think so. I think deuterium is actually healthy in the bones. Dr. Deb Muth 29:19Interesting. It actually makes the bone stronger, and in fact, there was a really beautiful article on seals. Seneff 29:24You know, SEALs, they do the deep dives, they get into this really, high-pressure zone. Dr. Deb Muth 29:28with… Seneff 29:29in deep water. So they have to be really strong, and the seals actually dope up their bones with twice as much deuterium as what is normal. So they concentrate deuterium. They showed it with the seals, they concentrate deuterium in their bones, and the deuterium makes the bones stronger, so they can sustain the high pressure of the dot. Do you hear the thunder? We’ve got a big thunderstorm. Dr. Deb Muth 29:52So, when you’re testing for deuterium in saliva, are you testing the excess, then? Like, what the body doesn’t. Seneff 30:00Well, there’s the. Dr. Deb Muth 30:00The waste of it? Seneff 30:01It’s really complicated, because I think it’s hard to know how to interpret it. It’s just like when you test for, like, you know, toxic metals, like mercury, like in the hair, you can do a. Dr. Deb Muth 30:13It’s in the hair. Seneff 30:14And sometimes you can find someone who actually has a problem with that metal, but the hair doesn’t show it. Dr. Deb Muth 30:20Bismar. Seneff 30:21doesn’t actually excrete it in the hair, so you have to think about Can the body get rid of it that way? And actually, in the saliva, I believe the saliva the body concentrates deuterium in the saliva, because it’s trying to get rid of deuterium. So a way to… you have the salivary glands, and they can actually excrete, preferentially excrete deuterium. Into the saliva. to concentrate it there in order to keep it out of the body. But those enzymes that do that might be compromised, in which case you have less deuterium in your mouth, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that’s good. You see what I mean? So when you see whatever the level is, it’s hard to interpret it, I believe. Dr. Deb Muth 30:58Yeah, it’s hard to tell what to do with it, then. Seneff 31:01Yeah, whether it’s low because your salivary glands aren’t working well, or whether it’s low because your whole body’s low, you know? And you can’t really know which way that goes, necessarily. So that makes it hard to interpret, I think. Dr. Deb Muth 31:13It sure does. Seneff 31:15I’m interested, for example, breast milk has low deuterium. Saliva has high deuterium. And you’re… I haven’t been able to find… there’s very few measurements, so I’d like to see a lot more measurements on the… just what’s typical, you know? Right. Dr. Deb Muth 31:31expect the urine to have hydrocherium, so anything that you’re excreting, I would expect it to have hydrocherium. So, knowing this information that we have, how does one fix these metabolic issues that we’ve kind of created in our own environment, for lack of a better term, because of our own… our own misgivings of what we’ve done in the world. How do we protect our brain and repair that metabolic issue in the mitochondria these days, then? Seneff 31:58I would say the most essential thing is to eat certified organic food. Dr. Deb Muth 32:02Always buy certified organic. It doesn’t guarantee that it’s free from chemicals, but it’s generally better. Seneff 32:07So that’s… we’ve been practicing that ever since 2012, when I figured out that glyphosate is causing a mess. So we went organic, and we’ve been like that ever since. We did a purge, we threw away everything, even the spices, started over in our kitchen. Yeah. In 2012, and then we’ve just been consistently buying certified organic ever since then. Dr. Deb Muth 32:27at least lowers the load, right? I mean… Seneff 32:29Yeah, it’s. Dr. Deb Muth 32:30There could be… Seneff 32:30some contamination. Dr. Deb Muth 32:31there, but… Seneff 32:32It’s a lot less, generally, but not zero, not necessarily zero. Dr. Deb Muth 32:35Right. Seneff 32:36undetectable. But that’s a really important thing. Another thing is to eat… I think eating fiber can help the microbes to produce those low-deuterium nutrients. The microbesWe can’t digest… our cells don’t know what to do with fiber, but the microbes can digest the fiber, turn it into hydrogen gas, turn it back into nutrients, like short-chain fatty acids, you know, butyrate. So, by eating foods that contain fiber, you’re helping the microbes to produce butyrate, and butyrate is really, really important for the health of the colon, you know? Dr. Deb Muth 33:07Yeah, and we’re talking about eating whole food organic, not organic Doritos and Cheetos. Seneff 33:13Right, right. Dr. Deb Muth 33:14kinds of things, right? Seneff 33:15Whole foods is really important. I always say whole foods and organic foods, those are the two really important things. And then I don’t really, you know, there’s all these different fad diets with respect to, a loss of fat, or no fat, and all that kind of thing. I don’t buy into any of those. I think you just want to have a balanced diet.Carbs are okay, you know, fats are really healthy, and especially animal-based fats are healthy. I don’t like a vegan diet, because I think animal-based foods provide certain nutrients that are really hard to get otherwise. And like I say, you can’t take choline by tartrate to replace the choline that’s in the animal-based foods. Dr. Deb Muth 33:48Right. Yeah, I’ve worked a lot, and I’ve never seen a healthy vegan. I mean, we can say we’re vegan.But those people are eating a lot of junk food, typically. They’re not true vegans, where they’re just eating whole food and getting all their nutrients from good quality foods. Most of the people that I’ve worked with over the years that have been vegan eat a lot of processed foods, a lot of junk foods. It just doesn’t include the animal fats, and then that makes them unhealthy, and we see a lot of nutrient deficiencies and a lot of pain and energy issues. It’s very hard to be a healthy vegan. In my opinion, as well. Seneff 34:20I agree, I agree, yeah. Dr. Deb Muth 34:23So I like to ask this question of all of my guests, and if you were designing a public health policy tomorrow, what would your first change be? Seneff 34:32To switch the farming system to be small farms that are regenerative, not just organic, organic regenerative small farms, with no use of chemicals. Dr. Deb Muth 34:42Yeah. Seneff 34:43No insecticides, no fungicides, no herbicides, nothing, you know? And even natural fertilizer, of course, as well. Of course, right now, you know, the organic farms rely on the chickens to get. Dr. Deb Muth 34:57the. Seneff 34:58Manure, which has glyphosate in it, so they… they get their glyphosate from the manure. Dr. Deb Muth 35:04Yeah, because a lot of that chicken feed has glyphosate in it, and then they’re passing that through, and we think that it doesn’t pass through, but it does pass through, and… Yeah, I would agree with you. I think when we went to these big industrial farming practices, we did not do ourselves any favor. And shipping food across the country to be slaughtered, only to ship it back here. Seneff 35:29It doesn’t make any sense, and… Dr. Deb Muth 35:32Growing things in environments where people live that isn’t natural to them, that doesn’t make sense to me either, in a lot of ways. Seneff 35:41Yeah, it’s very frustrating, because I think we really… it’s too bad that we lost all those small family farms, because we need them back. We really need them back, and I think that’s really the… and you want to have a variety of different crops, you know, we have all these massive cornfields, that’s just wrong. Dr. Deb Muth 35:55Yeah. Yeah, and they do nothing but corn until…Until your county says you have to do something different now, because you’ve depleted the soil too much, and they don’t want to put any soil preservation back in, and put any nutrients back in, because that’s expensive. Seneff 36:12Exactly. Dr. Deb Muth 36:13And then they’ll rotate the crop maybe once a year, and then they’re back to growing corn again, because that’s the largest revenue producer for them at the time, and it really is a challenge for us. Really a challenge. Seneff 36:26Yeah, it’s going to be very difficult to pivot to the kind of agriculture we need, and if we don’t do it, we’re just going to get sicker and sicker. Dr. Deb Muth 36:33Like, my friend. Seneff 36:34frightening. Dr. Deb Muth 36:35Yeah. Seneff 36:35How sick we are. Dr. Deb Muth 36:37Yeah, and I think people trying to grow their own food, at least some of it, can be really helpful and beneficial, too. We need to go back to that practice. Seneff 36:44I know, yes, rooftop farms, right? Dr. Deb Muth 36:47Back in the city. Seneff 36:48That’s really quite cool. I’ve heard some lectures on that. Dr. Deb Muth 36:51Yeah. Yeah, even some of the hydroponic growing that you can do in your apartment and get some lettuce and some herbs and things like that. I mean, anything that you can grow yourself, I think, is a big benefit. A, you don’t. Seneff 37:03I think it’s. Dr. Deb Muth 37:04B, you know how it’s been grown. C, it’s just healthier for you, and it’s less that you’re gonna have to buy that you don’t know that, what’s been growing in it, so… Seneff 37:13And it’s also kind of fun, right? You feel good that you’ve produced your own food. I think it’s really quite neat. Dr. Deb Muth 37:18Yeah, and there’s something, therapeutic about digging in the dirt a little bit, and getting your hands dirty. Seneff 37:24It’s really good to be outdoors and getting exercise. I mean, really, the work that’s involved with growing food is quite healthy work, really. Dr. Deb Muth 37:31Yeah, it’s a lot of work, for sure. That it is. So, for listeners that might be feeling a little overwhelmed about what we’re talking about, and thinking about, how do I detox or nutrition, where do I get some of this education, what kind of resources would you recommend for them? Seneff 37:47That’s a tough one. There’s not much known about deuterium, so it’s really quite difficult to… you can search deuterium, and there are some… a couple of good resources, which I can’t name, I could probably send you a link, describing deuterium. I know there’s a woman who’s written some nice material. on deuterium, just to get a sense of… more… a better sense of what it is, and why it’s a problem. But there’s not much. I mean, we need to have a lot more. I really want to get the research community aware that. Dr. Deb Muth 38:17They need to be. Seneff 38:17researching deuterium and its role in the body, because I think it’s absolutely essential. We’ll never understand disease if we don’t look at deuterium. Dr. Deb Muth 38:24Yeah, I think so, too. I think… I think the… there’s a lot of amazing discoveries that are being found. That could open the doors and give us answers to reversing a lot of disease, if there was funding behind it, if there were people like you that were interested in it, to really dig down from a functional medicine standpoint and try to figure it out instead of looking at it from a big pharma aspect, where we just need to find a pill that’ll fix it. Seneff 38:50I know. Dr. Deb Muth 38:51There are not pills that are going to fix these kinds of things. Seneff 38:54Right, yes, pharma’s way off base, I think. They’re really going after the completely wrong approach to health. Dr. Deb Muth 39:01I agree. Well, thank you so much for joining me today. It’s been a pleasure. Is there any last words that you want to leave with our listeners? Seneff 39:09I don’t know, I just, you know, healthy living is basically just eating whole foods, eating organic foods, getting plenty of fiber and fermented foods.And healthy fats, you know, sort of a variety of diet, a really mixed diet. Lots of fresh vegetables. I mean, there’s all these different great things to eat. Just stay away from the soy protein bars, you know, and the candy bars, and that sort of thing. And the cookies, I mean, just, you know. And then, of course, getting outside in the sunlight is something I always have to say. I love the sun. I think it’s very therapeutic, and we don’t get enough sunlight. We’re just. Dr. Deb Muth 39:43We don’t. And if we do, then we’re lathering on all of our sunscreen so that we don’t get the sun, and that’s creating its own issues, right? Seneff 39:51That’s right. Dr. Deb Muth 39:54Well, thank you so much for being with me today. Seneff 39:56Thank you. My pleasure. Dr. Deb Muth 40:03Thank you for joining me today on Let’s Talk Wellness Now. If this episode has resonated with you, share it with another woman ready to reclaim their health and their vitality. And remember, wellness isn’t just about feeling good, it’s about thriving in every area of your life. If you’re ready to explore personalized regenerative medicine. Please visit serenityhealthcarecenter.com. You can also follow me on social media, and join our free programSeen at Last community on Facebook. Until next time, I’m Dr. Deb, reminding you to care for your body, mind, and spirit. Be well, and I’ll see you on the next episode. Meta Boxes Use up and down arrow keys to resize the meta box pane.Toggle panel: AIOSEO Settings SERP Preview Let’s Talk Wellness Now https://letstalkwellnessnow.com › 2026 › 06 › 05 › episode-267-env…The post Episode 267 – Environmental Toxins, Nutrition, and Their Role in Chronic Disease Development first appeared on Let's Talk Wellness Now.
We're back! Disney recap, a zillion trailers, and reviews & recommendayshes of Terminator Zero and more. Bud's Weekly Geek-out 44:15 – AI-powered traffic cams Coming Soon 45:14 – Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (in theatres Friday) 47:50 – Moana 2 (in theatres November 27) 48:49 – A Minecraft Movie (in theatres April 4, 2025) (Zoner Bryce) 49:45 – Saturday Night (in theatres October 11) (Zoner Mary) 52:18 – Agatha All Along: trailer / ”revealed” (Marvel series, Disney+, September 18) (Zoner Mary) 54:05 – The Lord of The Rings: The Rings of Power (Prime Video series, S2, August 29) related: The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim (animated film, in theatres December 13) 59:42 – Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (in theatres December 20) 1:02:04 – D23: Avengers Campus (Infinity Defense / Stark Flight Lab) and Mando and Grogu coming to Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run (Zoner Mary) 1:03:01 – Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (documentary film, in theaters September 21 and September 25) (Zoner Ewan) and The Tragically Hip: No Dress Rehearsal (Prime Video documentary series, coming soon) and Wise Guy David Chase and The Sopranos (two-part HDO documentary, September 7 on Max) Coming Soon: Show Notes Edition – Snow White (in theatres March 21, 2025) (Zoner Mary) – Win or Lose (Pixar's first series, Disney+, December 6) – Secret Level (Prime Video anthology series, created/EP by Tim Miller, December 10, media release) – Ranma ½ (Netflix anime series, October 5) – The Silent Hour (in theatres October 11) – Kaos (Netflix series, August 29) – Wildwood (Laika film, 2025) – Omni Loop (in theatres and VOD September 20) – Amber Alert (in theatres and VOD September 27) – Nightbitch (in theatres December 6) Geek News Proper 1:05:37 – Celebrating 85 Years of Marvel 1:06:58 – Rotten Tomatoes is introducing a new ranking that recognizes audiences too – and Deadpool and Wolverine is one of the first recipients 1:12:13 – Ted Lasso eyes season 4 greenlight with main cast members returning – Remembering Robin Williams particularly: Sally Field reveals Robin Williams changed Mrs. Doubtfire filming order so she could leave set after her father died – The Acolyte won't return for season 2 Reviews and Recommendayshes 1:14:36 – Terminator Zero (Bud) 1:18:28 – Alien: Romulus (Pol & Art) 1:29:39 – Cuckoo Join The Geek-out Podcast's Facebook page (where we'll release new episodes, and where you can talk with us) and Facebook group (where fans of the podcast can gather and talk geeky stuff)! Questions? Comments? Corrections? Suggestions? e-mail geekout@TheZone.fm Subscribe to The Zone's Geek-out Podcast on Apple Podcasts. Or, copypasta this link to subscribe using your podcatcher of choice: https://omny.fm/shows/the-geek-out-podcast/playlists/podcast.rss And, get more Zone podcasty goodness at TheZone.fm/podcast
When you get deep enough into the natural health world, you learn about heavy hydrogen or deuterium. It is a natural contaminant that builds up in our body over time and stalls the nano motor in our mitochondria called the ATPase. Victor Sagalovsky of Litewater joins us once again to talk about the health benefits of depleting deuterium in the body, not only for disease prevention but also to radically extend human lifespan. He talks about the cancer connection with deuterium, how the Russians discovered it, how your body will intelligently shuttle deuterium to less important tissues, on average how many molecules of HDO are in a glass of water, and how deuterium affects our reflex time. He also talks about human photosynthesis and why he loves melanin, we get into a friendly debate about whole food vs isolated supplements, he shares his theory on what the Ark of the Convenant was, and I ask listener questions including his thoughts on hydrogen infused water, sunlight to deplete deuterium, and the ideal PPM of deuterium in our drinking water. www.drinklitewater.com www.beevitamin.com www.protiumgenerator.com My website: www.matt-blackburn.com Mitolife products: www.mitolife.co Music by George Henner: https://georgehenner.bandcamp.com
You would think there is a procedure to End-of-Life a medical device, right? Erase personal health info. Erase network configuration info. Speaking at SecTor 2023, Deral Heiland from Rapid 7 said he found that he was able to buy infusion pumps on the secondary market with the network credentials for the original Health Care Delivery Organization in tact. In theory he could join that network as that device and potentially pivot to other parts of the HDO. No good since there are 100s of thousands of these devices in use today.
HDO 568 está dedicado a los cuatro grupos finalistas del Concurso Internacional de Grupos del 46 Getxo Jazz 2023. En HDO 568 escuchamos tres temas de cada uno de los grupos, pertenecientes a sus últimas grabaciones, a saber: Vincent Meissner Trio: Wille; Álvaro Ocón: The Ritual; Giulio Ottanelli: The Paris Session (2023); Jarecki Jazz Octet: EP: Extended Products.
HDO 567 está dedicado a tres grabaciones del sello Underpool, que llega a su décimo aniversario, de Sergi Felipe, Oscar Doménech y Oriol Roca Trio & Lynn Cassiers. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
HDO 566 es un programa en versión 3X3 de título Referencias y referentes: Django Reinhardt de la mano de Stephane Wrembel: Django New Orleans (NPR, 2023); Miles Davis con M.E.B.: That You Not Dare To Forget (Columbia, 2023); Mary Lou Williams por medio de Cecilia Smith The Mary Lou Williams Resurgence Project: Volume 1: Small Ensemble Repertoire (Innova Recordings, 2023). HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
Frans Vermeerssen Trio - Mixing Memory and Desire - Bo van de Graaf son los grupos que suenan en un HDO en versión 3X3. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
En HDO 564, la tercera entrega de HDO dedicada en exclusiva al sello Carimbo Porta Jazz, realizamos un repaso a cinco grabaciones publicadas a lo largo de los últimos meses por este sello de la asociación lusa residente en Oporto Porta Jazz. En el programa suenan... Vazio e o Octaedro: Vazio e o Octaedro / Vera Morais - Hristo Goleminov: Consider the Plums / Pedro Neves Trio: Hindrances / 293 Diagonal: Membrana / Nuno Campos 4et: Something To Believe In. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
HDO #563 lleva por título Cosecha ECM. Suena música de Stephan Micus: Thunder - Jacob Bro / Joe Lovano: Once Around The Room. A Tribute to Paul Motian - Anders Jormin: Pasado en claro - Arild Andersen Group: Affirmation - Mette Henriette: Drifting - Sebastian Rochford: A Short Diary - Evgueni Galperine: Theory of Becoming. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
Tritarristas es el título de la nueva entrega de HDO dedicada a las nuevas grabaciones lideradas por los guitarristas Guillermo Bazzola, Eddie Mejía y Albert Vila.
El grupo Symbiosis 5 fue el ganador del Concurso Internacional de Grupos de la edición de 2022 del Festival Internacional de Jazz de Getxo. En HDO 561 escuchamos tres temas de la grabación publicada como premio por su victoria. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
En HDO 559 escuchamos cuatro grabaciones del saxofonista barítono Josh Sinton en formatos de cuarteto, trío y solitario por partida doble. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
Entre el 24 y el 26 de febrero de 2023 el pianista Álvaro Torres dará tres conciertos liderando su trío, que completan el contrabajista Masa Kamaguchi y el baterista Kresten Osgood. En HDO 558 presentamos los conciertos y a los músicos. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
In this episode, we're joined by Scott Kaufman from High Dividend Opportunities to get the HDO outlook for 2023, and what they think about the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF(JEPI) that has been getting a lot of buzz for its double-digit yield. Check Out More High Dividend Opportunities Here! ----Follow Investing Experts Podcast on Seeking Alpha to view this episode's show notes, data visualizations, and transcription.
El martes 27 de diciembre de 2022 a las 19:00 el quinteto Hutsun + JEL Trío actuarán en la sala de Proyecciones de la Biblioteca de Navarra en Pamplona para presentar Artze (Errabal Jazz, 2022). En HDO 556 estrenamos Artze. Escuchamos cuatro temas de la grabación y presentamos el concierto y al grupo. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
HDO 555 está dedicado a las tres novedades del sello sevillano Blue Asteroid Records publicadas en otoño de 2022. Tertulia de Cuarteto Fuerte; Spanish Tinge de The Choco's Hot Seven; y El retorno de Saturno de Julio Marín. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
En HDO 554, la cuarta entrega de Canajazz, suenan seis propuestas de jazz que llegan desde Canadá. Ernesto Cervini: Joy - Brûlez les meubles: Tardif / L’appel du vide - So Long Seven: only elephants know her name - Gentiane MG: Walls Made of Glass - Rafael Zaldivar: Rumba. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
HDO 553 está dedicado a siete grabaciones publicadas por el sello italiano We Insist Records. Suenan artistas como Joëlle Léandre, Pascal Contet, Gianmaria Aprile, Gabrielle Mitelli, John Edwards, Mark Sanders, Andrea Grossi Blend 3, Alberto Braida, Luca Tilli y Sebi Tramontana. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
El grupo Monodrama va a dar durante los meses de noviembre y diciembre de 2022 unos cuantos conciertos por España para presentar en directo su nueva grabación, la innombrable MNDRMOOAA (Everlasting Records, 2022). En JazzX5 presentamos los conciertos y escuchamos la música de la última grabación de este trío. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
En HDO 551 escuchamos diez temas, dos por cada una de las grabaciones del segundo lote de reediciones del catálogo histórico de Candid Records con discos liderados por Cecil Taylor, Pee Wee Russell - Coleman Hawkins, Clark Terry, Booker Ervin y Booker Little. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
En HDO 550 escuchamos música de cuatro grabaciones del sello Fou Records, centradas en la improvisación libre. En ellas participan músicos de primer nivel como Joëlle Léandre, Paul Lovens, Carlos Zingaro o Jean-Marc Foussat, artífice de este sello más que recomendable. HDO es un podcast de Pachi Tapiz.
"Take the A-Train" Dave Brubeck Trio Live From Vienna 1967 (Brubeck Editions, 2022) Dave Brubeck, Eugene Wright, Joe Morello. JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz.
One of the hardest things to achieve in business is a Merger and Acquisition. Even with a successful M and A, there's always challenges. There's always stress. And so many questions that must be asked. What technology standards do they operate with? What devices do they have in their environment? What best practices do they adhere to? I think everybody in the world assumes that the CIO knows all this and can identify all the devices and knows what patch version and what risk level etc. But that is not always the case. Connected devices bring complicated risks, so Medigate created a single platform to orchestrate and integrate HDO security throughout your environment, so you can connect with confidence.https://www.medigate.io/demo ( https://www.medigate.io/demo) This is episode 2 of 5 on our series “Challenges and Solutions to Unmanaged Devices in Healthcare”. Other topics we cover include Visibility for Zero Trust, Holistic Assessments, Improved Device Effectiveness, and Securing OT Assets. Stay tuned for more. Sign up for our webinar: https://thisweekhealth.com/briefing_campaigns/challenges-and-solutions-to-unmanaged-devices-in-healthcare/ (Challenges and Solutions to Unmanaged Devices in Healthcare) - Thursday September 8, 2022: 1pm ET / 10am PT
Art Markman, PhD is the Annabel Irion Worsham Centennial Professor of Psychology, HDO, and Marketing at the University of Texas at Austin and Executive Director of the IC2 Institute. He has written over 150 research papers on topics including reasoning, decision making, and motivation. Art brings insights from cognitive science to a broader audience through... The post Art Markman on the Circuit of Success appeared first on The Circuit of Success with Brett Gilliland.
"Caldonia" The Complete Columbia Recordings of Woody Herman And His Orchestra & Woodchoppers (1945-1947) (Mosaic Records) Ralph Burns arreglos y piano. Además, intervinieron Woody Herman, Pete Candoli, John LaPorta, Flip Phillips, Pete Mondello, Billy Bauer, Chubby Jackson entre otros. Grabado en 1945. En Tomajazz recordamos a Ralph Burns (29 de junio de 1922), en el centenario de su nacimiento. Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Out The Window" Jazmeia Horn Love And Liberation (Concord Jazz, 2019) Jazzmeia Horn, Ben Williams, Jamison Ross, Sullivan Fortner, Victor Gould, Chris Dunn, Stacy Dillard, Josh Evans son los músicos que participan en Love And Liberation. El tema es una composición de Jazzmeia Horn ¿Sabías que? Jazzmeia Horn nació en Texas en 1991, aunque se trasladó a Nueva York en 2009. Love And Liberation fue el segundo disco de Jazzmeia Horn y le supuso su segunda nominación a los Premios Grammy, en la edición de 2020. Entre otros premios ha ganado las votaciones de Downbeat, el Thelonious Monk Jazz Competition o el Sarah Vaughan International Jazz Vocal Competition. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Más información sobre Jazzmeia Horn https://www.artistryofjazzhorn.com/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Viruses" Ori Dagan Click Right Here (Autoeditado, 2022) Ori Dagan, Nathan Hiltz, Attila Fias, Alex Bellegarde, Ben Wittman, Colleen Allen, Alison Young, William Carn, Andrew McAnsh. Invitados: Jane Bunnett, Erik Flow, Shannon Butcher, Jessica Lalonde, Melissa Lauren. El tema es una composición de Ori Dagan y el rapero Erik Flow. ¿Sabías que? Click Right Here es un disco conceptual. JazzX5 vuelve a su frecuencia diaria, alternado con HDO. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Más información sobre Ori Dagan https://www.oridagan.com/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
En HDO volvemos a parte de su dinámica habitual centrando la entrega 548 en tres grabaciones lideradas por guitarristas, las tres más que recomendables. John Scofield acaba de publicar en el sello ECM Solo, armado únicamente con su guitarra eléctrica y sus loopers, para dar cuenta de un repertorio tanto ajeno (jazzístico y no jazzístico), como propio. Miles Okazaki lidera un cuarteto que completan Matt Mitchell, Anthony Tidd y Sean RIckman en Thisness (Pi Recordings). El tercer guitarrista involucrado en el programa es Fred Frith, que ha publicado en Intakt el doble CD Road al mando de su trío (que completan Jason Hoopes y Jordan Glenn), y que cuenta en el segundo de los discos con la colaboración de la trompetista Susana Santos Silva y la saxofonistas Lotte Anker. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 ¿Sabías que? HDO 548 te gustará… si te gusta el jazz... si eres seguidor de Fred Frith, John Scofield o Miles Okazaki. En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / JazzX5 Centennial… Más información sobre Fred Frith - John Scofield - Miles Okazaki http://www.fredfrith.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=fred+frith&submit=Search https://www.johnscofield.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=john+scofield&submit=Search https://www.milesokazaki.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=miles+okazaki&submit=Search Más sobre HDO HDO es un podcast de jazz e improvisación (libre en mayor o menor grado) que está editado, presentado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. Para quejas, sugerencias, protestas, peticiones, presentaciones y/u opiniones envíanos un correo a hdo@tomajazz.com Todas las entregas de HDO. Hablando de oídas están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=13298 HDO y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
Die heutige junge Generation tut sich mitunter schwer mit diesem Begriff: "Die Sudetendeutschen" - Was waren das für Menschen? Wann und warum kamen sie nach Bayern - gelten hier sogar als 4. Stamm neben den Altbayern, Schwaben und Franken? Und warum haben sie mit Christina Meinusch sogar eine eigene Heimatpflegerin, ein eigenes Museum und Archiv? Seit 1970 gibt es Antworten darauf u.a. im "Haus des Deutschen Ostens" (HDO) in München, einer Kultur-, Bildungs- und Begegnungseinrichtung des Freistaates Bayern.
El pianista Alexis Alonso y el flautista - saxofonista Jorge Pardo se han embarcado en la gira a dúo "La vida en el agua" que los ha llevado en una primera parte a actuar en las Islas Canarias (Gran Canaria, Tenerife, Lanzarote y La Gomera). En la segunda parte de su gira actuarán en la Península, con conciertos en Barcelona (31 de mayo. Nota 79); Valencia (1 de junio. Matisse Club); Madrid (2 de junio. Sala Clamores); Barcelona de nuevo (3 de junio. Jamboree Club); Tarragona (4 de junio. Teatre El Magatzem); finalizando en Zaragoza el 5 de junio (Centro Cívico Universidad). El origen de este proyecto fue la colaboración de Jorge Pardo en el disco Love In Floating Bridges de Alexis Alonso. En HDO 546 escuchamos ese tema, que da título a la gira, así como dos temas grabados en el inicio de la gira en el concierto que ambos músicos dieron en el Teatro Guiniguada de Gran Canaria el 26 de mayo. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 ¿Sabías que? HDO 546 te gustará… si te gustan el jazz... si eres seguidor de Jorge Pardo o de Alexis Alonso...
"India" El Kinki El Directo en Paris (Believe Digital, 2022) El Kinki, Philippe Botta, Serge Adam. El tema es una composición de John Coltrane. ¿Sabías que? "India" abre la grabación El Directo en París de El Kinki. El disco se grabó en París el 8 de octubre de 2021 y se publicó el 20 de mayo de 2022. El Kinki se encarga de la programación y el cante, Philippe Botta de los saxos tenor y soprano y ney, mientras que Serge Adam toca la trompeta. Diego El Kinki es un madrileño afincado en París que según su propia definición toca "flamenco electrónico", aunque "otros proyectos exploran senderos musicales del jazz electrónico". Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Más información sobre El Kinki https://www.elkinki.net/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Breaking The Law" Lobo & Dirty Martini (2022) Andreu Muntaner ̈Lobo ̈, Gherardo Cantazaro, Yrvis Méndez, Antonio Pax. El tema es un clásico (arriba las manos con los cuernos) del repertorio de Judas Priest. ¿Sabías que? "Breaking The Law" es el single adelanto de la nueva grabación de Dirty Martini. El tema se estrenó en directo en Café Berlín (Madrid), el pasado 20 de mayo. La nueva grabación de Dirty Martini se publicará en el último trimestre de 2022 y también se estrenará en el local madrileño. Al ser el tema una versión de un himno de un grupo histórico del movimiento Heavy Metal, pasa por derecho propio a la sección Malditos Jazztardos. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Más información sobre Lobo & Dirty Martiny https://www.facebook.com/LOBO-Dirty-Martini-195796960456182 Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"2001: A Space Odyssey" Tribute to Deodato Lou Pomanti Lou Pomanti & Friends (Vesuvius Music, 2022) Lou Pomanti, Stee Heathcote, Marc Rogers, Randy Brecker. El tema es una composición de Richard Strauss. ¿Sabías que? "2001: A Space Odyssey (Tribute to Deodato)" es el tercer single que se publica como adelanto de Lou Pomanti & Friends. Posteriormente a su publicación, se publicaron otros dos singles. Lou Pomanti se encarga en la grabación de los teclados y programación, contando con un buen número de amigos. La lista de colaboraciones incluye a Emilie-Claire Barlow, Randy Brecker, David Clayton-Thomas, Mab Dusk, Marc Jordan, Oakland Stroke, John Finley, Dione Taylor, Robyn Black, Larnell Lewis, Irene Torres, June Garber, Sam Pomanti, Scob Alexander, Lou Bartolomucci, Tony Carlucci, William Carn, Steve Heathcote, Chris Howells, John Johnson, Drew Jurecka, Jake Langley, Blair Lofgren, Jason Logue, Steve MacDonald, Bill McBirnie, John Panchyshyn, Prague Smecky Orchestra, Marc Rogers, Kathryn Rose, William Sperandei, Simon Wallis. Lou Pomanti & Friends se publica el 27 de mayo de 2022. Al ser una version de un tema que proviene de la música clásica, pasa a la sección Malditos Jazztardos con total merecimiento. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Más información sobre Lou Pomanti https://loupomanti.com/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Big Foot" (feat. Joshua Redman) Tigran Hamasyan StandArt (Nonesuch Records, 2022) Tigran Hamasyan, Matt Brewer, Justin Brown, Joshua Redman. El tema es una composición de Charlie Parker. ¿Sabías que? StandArt es el primer disco de standards del pianista armenio Tigran Hamasyan. El disco es en trío, le acompañan Matt Brewer y Justin Bown, aunque cuenta con colaboraciones de postín: Mark Turner y Joshua Redman colaboran en un tema cada uno, mientras que el trompetista Ambrose Akinmusire. En el disco hay ocho temas propios más una composición, la más breve del disco, compuesta por el cuarteto que la interpreta.: el de Tigran más Ambrose Akinmusire. En breve podremos disfrutar en INSTANTZZ de una galería fotográfica exclusiva con la actuación del músico en Barcelona. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Escuchar Tigran Hamasyan StandArt: "Big Foot" En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=43600 Más información sobre Tigran Hamasyan https://www.tigranhamasyan.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=tigran&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Graffiti" Gianni Narduzzi Dharma Burns (Carimbo Porta Jazz, 2022) Gianni Narduzzi, Gonçalo Ribeiro, Joaquim Festas, Alfonso Silva, Hugo Cadeira. El tema es composición de Gianni Narduzzi. ¿Sabías que? Gianni Narduzzi es, además de contrabajista, compositor. En Dharma Burns la formación predominante es en cuarteto, aunque el tema que cierra la grabación se extiende hasta la formación de octeto. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Más información sobre Gianni Narduzzi https://gianninarduzzi.wordpress.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=gianni+narduzzi&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
En JazzX5 celebramos la entrega número 500 homenajeando a un grande del jazz en su centenario (Kai Winding), en muy buenas compañías (Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Blakey...), y con un precioso tema bien conocido. "Sweet And Lovely" Giants Of Jazz The Giants Of Jazz (Jazzmen, rec. 1972) Kai Winding, Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Blakey, Sonny Stitt, Al McKibbon. El tema es una composición de Gus Arnheim, Jules Lemare, Harry Tobias. La grabación se realizó el 12 de noviembre de 1972 en Suiza y estuvo producida por un peso pesado del jazz como fue George Wein. En https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=63546 realizamos un repaso a la carrera de este gran trombonista. Más información sobre Kai WInding http://www.bjbear71.com/Winding/Kai.html https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=kai+winding&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Wights Waits For Weights" Steve Coleman Group Motherland Pulse (JMT, 1985) Steve Coleman, Geri Allen, Lonnie Plaxico, Marvin "Smitty" Smith. El tema es composición de Steve Coleman. ¿Sabías que? En Motherland Pulse el grupo central fue el cuarteto formado por Steve Coleman, Geri Allen, Lonnie Plaxico y Marvin "Smitty" Smith, aunque puntualmente colaboraron Cassandra Wilson, Graham Haynes y Mark Johnson. El disco Motherland Pulse fue la primera referencia de JMT (Jazz Music Today). Estuvo producido por Stefan Winter, que posteriormente lo reeditó en su sello Winter & Winter junto al resto de producciones de JMT cambiando la portada original por un diseño muy reconocible de color negro, con las letras en colores rojo y negro sobre fondo blanco. En Winter & Winter fue la primera de las 81 referencias publicadas en estas reediciones. Motherland Pulse es una muestra magnífica del universo creativo del saxofonista Steve Coleman, lo que él define como M-BASE (Macro-Basic Array of Structured Extemporization). Aunque en este colectivo, nacido en la década de 1980 en Brooklyn, también colaboraron otros músicos (además de los que aparecen en esta grabación), como Robin Eubanks y Greg Osby. Más allá de un acrónimo de una expresión laberíntica, encontramos en Coleman a un magnífico compositor y un muy buen saxofonista. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=44104 Más información sobre Steve Coleman https://m-base.com/biography/ https://stevecoleman.bandcamp.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=steve+coleman&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"And Then A New Dream" Marcos Pin featuring Juan Cañada 4 New Reasons (Autoeditado, 2022) Marcos Pin, Juan Cañada. Composición de Marcos Pin. ¿Sabías que? 4 New Reasons es una grabación en formato EP: cuatro temas, con una duración de poco más de veinte minutos, que se escucha en un suspiro y que deja un magnífico sabor de boca. La grabación está publicada únicamente en formato digital y se puede conseguir en el Bandcamp del guitarrista. Además de contar cosas muy interesantes con su guitarra y en el pentagrama, Marcos Pin tampoco se maneja nada mal con las palabras. En Tomajazz tuvimos la suerte de contar con su colaboración. El resultado fueron unos unos relatos muy recomendables: "El Club", "La undécima", "La ruptura", "El viaje"... © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=36327 Más información sobre Marco Pin https://marcospin.bandcamp.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=marcos+pin&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Passarinho" Marco Mezquida Letter To Milos (Autoeditado, 2022) Marco Mezquida, Martín Meléndez, Aleix Tobias. Composición de Marco Mezquida. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=23700 Marco Mezquida Letter To Milos en imágenes https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=62981 Más información sobre Marco Mezquida https://marcomezquida.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?tag=marco-mezquida Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Aurora" Juan Saiz Pindio II (2022, Leo Records) Juan Saiz, Marco Mezquida, Manel Fortià, Genís Bagés. Composición de Juan Saiz. ¿Sabías que? En Tomajazz tenemos el honor de estrenar "Aurora", un tema adelanto de Pindio II, la nueva grabación de Juan Saiz que se publica el viernes 13 de mayo de 2022. Tanto "Aurora" como el resto de temas del disco (que tiene una duración de cuarenta y cuatro minutos y cuarenta y cuatro segundos), son composiciones de Juan Saiz... aunque en su desarrollo tienen un papel esencial Marco Mezquida, Manel Fortià y Genís Bagés. No es la primera vez que Juan Saiz publica una grabación en Leo Records... H.C., la primera entrega de Pindio lo publicó allí en 2016. También Frágil Gigante junto a Baldo Martínez y Lucía Martínez en 2020. en el sello han grabado Anthony Braxton, Cecil Taylor, The Art Ensemble Of Chicago o Sun Ra por mencionar únicamente a tres de mis héroes jazzísticos particulares. En concreto, los conciertos de la gira británica de Anthony Braxton son unos monumentos de la historia del jazz... lo que allí interpretaron Braxton, Mark Dresser, Marilyn Crispell y Gerry Hemingway es música de otro planeta... en concreto de la constelación Leo... de la de Leo Feigin, el encargado en mantener ese enorme sello. Hay veces en que me da la impresión de que esto de las Matemáticas no es lo mío... © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=24764 Más información sobre Juan Saiz https://www.juansaiz.es/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?tag=juan-saiz Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Volx" Tàlveg Arbori (2020, Bandcamp) Marcel·lí Bayer, Ferran Fages, Oriol Roca. El tema es obra de Tàlveg. ¿Sabías que? Arbori fue la primera grabación de larga duración de Tàlveg. No obstante, el trío ya había publicado un EP con anterioridad. Posteriormente publicó un nuevo LP, y otros tres EP, dos de ellos titulados Live Series I y II una pura declaración de intenciones. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=44010 Tàlveg en acción https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=62184 Más información sobre Tàlveg http://www.talvegmusic.bandcamp.com/ https://www.marcellibayer.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?tag=marcel%c2%b7li-bayer https://www.instagram.com/ferranfages/?hl=es https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?tag=ferran-fages https://oriolrocamusic.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?tag=oriol-roca Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"This Is Always" Fred Hersch Breath By Breat (2022, Palmetto Records) Fred Hersch, Drew Gress, Jochen Rueckert, Crosby Street String Quartet. El tema es una composición de Harry Warren, Mack Gordon. ¿Sabías que? "This Is Always" es el nuevo single de Fred Hersch. Se grabó en las mismas sesiones que Breath By Breath. En esta grabación todos los temas originales, pero este nuevo tema es una versión de un tema que han interpretado artistas de la talla de Charlie Parker o Chet Baker. El lanzamiento del single, el 6 de mayo de 2022, coincide con la gira europea del pianista por Europa incluyendo cuatro noches en París, así como conciertos en Bélgica e Italia. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=44565 Más información sobre Fred Hersch https://fredhersch.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=fred+hersch&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Bluesette" Toots Thielemans The Whistler And His Guitar (1964, ABC - Paramount) Toots Thielemans, Dick Hyman, Arnold Fiskin, Don Lamond, Sol Gubin. El tema es una composición de Toots Thielemans. ¿Sabías que? Toots Thielemans nació en Bruselas el 22 de abril de 1922. En https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=63186 repasamos la carrera de este músico. En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=60914 Más información sobre Toots Thielemans https://toots100.be/ https://tootsthielemans.com https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=thielemans&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Organum" Hugo Carvalhais: Ascetica (Clean Feed, 2022) Hugo Carvalhais, Emile Parisien, Liudas Mockunas, Fábio Almeida, Gabriel Pinto, Mário Costa. Composición de Hugo Carvalhais. ¿Sabías que? Ascetica es la cuarta grabación de Hugo Carvalhais en Clean Feed. Tras Nebulosa (2010), Particula (2012), y Grand Valis (2015). Esta última grabación apareció en múltiples listas con lo mejor de las grabaciones de 2015, de modo que había ganas de volver a escuchar al contrabajista portugués, tras una espera de siete años. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=29879 Más información sobre Hugo Carvalhais https://www.facebook.com/hugo-carvalhais-173486179366710/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
El sello Candid Records comenzó su actividad en el año 1960. Surgió como un sello subsidiario de Cadence Records, que encargó al crítico musical Nat Hentoff la dirección del nuevo sello. A lo largo de dos años (cesó su actividad a finales del año 1961), publicó más de treinta obras de jazz y blues en las que tuvo el gran acierto de de mirar hacia algunas de las figuras del jazz más creativo de ese momento, como en mirar a su vez a algunos clásicos incontestables. Un acierto artístico, que no se vio acompañado por el acierto en lo económico. Tanto Candid como Cadence Records tuvieron que cesar su actividad. Desde entonces el catálogo ha estado activo y disponible de un modo más o menos intermitente, de tal modo que obras maestras como Freedom Now Suite o Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus, han estado disponibles para los aficionados. En los últimos años Exceleration Music ha reactivado el sello. A distintas novedades discográficas nominadas y ganadoras de premios Grammy, se une en 2022 el proyecto de la reedición remasterizada en distintos formatos (LP, CD, digital), de algunos de los títulos clásicos de su catálogo clásico. En abril de 2022 ha reeditado Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus (coincidiendo con el centenario del genial contrabajista), We Insist! Freedom Now Suite (Max Roach), Straight Ahead (Abbey Lincoln), y dos joyas de blues como son Lightnin' In New York (Lightnin' Hopkins) y Otis Spann Is The Blues. En HDO 545 repasamos la historia de esa parte inicial del sello (años 1960-61), y escuchamos temas de las cinco reediciones mencionadas. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 ¿Sabías que? HDO 545 te gustará… si te gustan el jazz y el blues... si te gusta el Jazz... si te gustan Charles Mingus, Max Roach, Abbey Lincoln... o el blues y a Otis Spann y Lightnin' Hopkins... En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61868 Más información sobre Exceleration Music / Candid Records https://www.excelerationmusic.com/ https://candidrecords.com/ Más sobre HDO HDO es un podcast de jazz e improvisación (libre en mayor o menor grado) que está editado, presentado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. Para quejas, sugerencias, protestas, peticiones, presentaciones y/u opiniones envíanos un correo a hdo@tomajazz.com Todas las entregas de HDO. Hablando de oídas están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=13298 HDO y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"La Voz Grave y Los Ojos Negros" Liba Villavecchia Trio: Zaidín (Clean Feed, 2022) Liba Villavecchia, Alex Reviriego, Vasco Trilla. El tema es una composición de Liba Villavecchia. ¿Sabías que? Zaidín es la primera grabación del Liba Villavecchia Trio. El Liba Villavecchia Trio se formó en marzo de 2021 teniendo en mente homenajear al gran saxofonista Thomas Chapin. No obstante, la creatividad los llevó por otros derroteros y unos meses más tarde ya habían pasado por el estudio de grabación y justo un año después (marzo de 2022), ya habían publicado su primera grabación en el sello Clean Feed. Si bien no es el primer grupo español en publicar en el importante sello portugués, no son muchas las propuestas que han grabado en el sello dirigido por Pedro Costa. El tema es un homenaje precioso, uno de mis temas preferido de esta magnífica grabación que es Zaidín: muy recomendable. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=57001 Más información sobre Liba Villavecchia https://libavillavecchia.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=liba+villavecchia&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Paranoid" Jazz Sabbath: Vol. 2 (BlackLake Records) Milton Keanes, Jacque T’fono, Juan Také, Leighton B’zard, Allen Kees, Lester Trumpton, Elton Spanks-William, Fenton Breezley, Loquacious Fellaish, Francis Mellie, Angus Guitaropoulos. Producido por Adam Wakeman, Jerry Meehanm, Ash Soan. ¿Sabías que? Jazz Sabbath se han reunido cincuenta y dos años después de grabar su primer disco. El primer disco del grupo que se grabó en 1970, aunque finalmente vio la luz legalmente en 2020. Vol.2 era un disco planificado para haberse grabado en 1969. Sin embargo distintos problemas legales, un infarto del líder de Jazz Sabath, Milton Keanes, que conllevaron el despido de su discográfica, a lo que se sumó un incendio del almacén en el que estaban todas las copias de la primera grabación para cobrar dinero del seguro, hicieron que el grupo estuviese en silencio durante 50 años, hasta que en 2020 se pudo reeditar su primer disco. Durante todos estos años, una banda de Birmingham se apropió del repertorio de Jazz Sabbath y la llevó a los terrenos del Heavy Metal. Cuando Keanes salió del hospital, la otra banda había publicado dos grabaciones recreando esos temas de jazz y ganando mucha popularidad. Al no tener ninguna prueba de que él había escrito esos temas, no tuvo la oportunidad de hacer nada al respecto. A partir de ese momento, el resto es historia. El trío se desmembró. El pianista se fue a los Estados Unidos, y por equivocación tomó un autobús a Nueva Orleans en vez de a Nueva York (donde pretendía ir a tocar jazz en sus clubs). Durante muchos años se ganó la vida tocando con todo aquel grupo que necesitase un pianista. Entre tanto pasó el tiempo intentando averiguar por qué había tantas brass bands en ese "Nueva York" y cuál de sus parques era "Central Park". A lo largo de nueve años logró superar su temor a las trompetas y se empapó del estilo Nueva Orleans. Una vez se vio preparado para asentarse en Crescent City, decidió legalizar su situación. Craso error, ya que cuando pidió una Green Card, el Departamento de Inmigración constató que había estado viviendo ilegalmente en los USA, durante muchos años, y por ese motivo lo deportó de vuelta a Birmingham. Una vez en su ciudad natal, Milton Keanes ha pasado los años enviando cartas furiosas al otro grupo de charlatanes que tocaba Heavy Metal, hasta que en 2019 descubrieron los masters de la primera grabación (que se publicó en 2020), y finalmente pudo reunir a su trío para grabar los temas que estaban destinados originalmente su segunda grabación, dándoles su verdadero sentido, y no el que le aportaban los falsos "Sabbath". Puesto que el tema "Paranoid", si bien era originalmente una composición de jazz de Milton Keanes, es conocida por su versión del grupo que comienza por Black y termina por Sabbath, pasa a la sección Malditos Jazztardos. © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5 / HDO / LODLMA / Maltidos Jazztardos / Tomajazz Remembers /JazzX5 Centennial… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=31087 Más información sobre Jazz Sabbath http://www.jazzsabbath.net/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. Las sugerencias, quejas, felicitaciones, opiniones y el contacto en general en jazzx5 @ tomajazz.com También por WhatsApp en el teléfono de contacto. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
On this very special episode, Two Guys on Your Head hosts Art Markman and Bob Duke pay a visit to The Other Side of Campus for a fun discussion with Jen and Stephanie about effective learning and teaching. You don't want to miss this interesting and hilarious collaboration. Thanks for joining us! ABOUT OUR GUESTS https://ic2.utexas.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Art_Headshot_dv-edit-300x300.jpg Art Markman, Ph.D., is Annabel Irion Worsham Centennial Professor of Psychology and Marketing at the University of Texas at Austin. He got his Sc.B. in Cognitive Science from Brown and his Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Illinois. He has published over 150 scholarly works on topics in higher-level thinking including the effects of motivation on learning and performance, analogical reasoning, categorization, decision making, and creativity. Art serves as the director of the program in the Human Dimensions of Organizations at the University of Texas. He spent 9 years as executive editor of the journal Cognitive Science and currently serves as a member of the editorial board of Cognitive Psychology. Art is also co-host of the radio show and podcast Two Guys on Your Head produced by KUT Radio in Austin. https://music.utexas.edu/sites/files/bsom/styles/quarterwidth/public/faculty_profile_images/duke2.jpeg?itok=06nBl10S Robert Duke is the Marlene and Morton Meyerson Centennial Professor and Head of Music and Human Learning at The University of Texas at Austin, where he is a University and University of Texas System Distinguished Teaching Professor, Elizabeth Shatto Massey Distinguished Fellow in Teacher Education, and Director of the Center for Music Learning. He is also a clinical professor in the Dell Medical School at The University of Texas and was the founding director of the psychology of learning program at the Colburn Conservatory of Music in Los Angeles. Dr. Duke's research on human learning and behavior spans multiple disciplines, and his most recent work explores the refinement of procedural memories and the analysis of gaze in teacher-learner interactions. A former studio musician and public school music teacher, he has worked closely with children at-risk, both in the public schools and through the juvenile justice system. He is the author of Scribe 4 behavior analysis software, and his most recent books are Intelligent Music Teaching: Essays on the Core Principles of Effective Instruction, The Habits of Musicianship, which he co-authored with Jim Byo of Louisiana State University, and Brain Briefs, which he co-authored with Art Markman, his co-host on the public radio program and podcast Two Guys on Your Head, produced by KUT Radio in Austin. PRODUCER'S NOTE: This episode was recorded on November 6th, 2020 via Zoom. CREDITS Assistant Producers/Hosts: Stephanie Seidel Holmsten, JenMoon (Intro theme features additional PTF fellows Patrick Davis, Keith Brown, David Vanden Bout) Original Music, Sound Design, and Editing by Charlie Harper (www.charlieharpermusic.com) Recorded and Produced by Michelle S Daniel Creator & Executive Producer: Mary C. Neuburger Connect with us! Facebook: /texasptf Twitter: @TexasPTF Website: https://texasptf.org DISCLAIMER: The Other Side of Campus is a member of the Texas Podcast Network, brought to you by The University of Texas at Austin. Podcasts are produced by faculty members and staffers at UT Austin who work with University Communications to craft content that adheres to journalistic best practices. The University of Texas at Austin offers these podcasts at no charge. Podcasts appearing on the network and this webpage represent the views of the hosts, not of The University of Texas at Austin. https://files.fireside.fm/file/fireside-uploads/images/1/1ed1b736-a1fa-4ae4-b346-90d58dfbc8a4/4GSxOOOU.png Special Guests: Art Markman and Bob Duke.