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An iconic song by a band that had mastered not just their sound, but their feel and approach to being a band, and a cover by a master of her craft. I Need You Tonight, originally by INXS, covered by Bonnie Raitt. Outro music is Lazaretto, by Jack White.
Episode 103 of Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick, the podcast about making stuff (mostly writing), finding success as we each define it for ourselves, and staying healthy and sane in the process… features a conversation with the horror and horrific fantasy author Thom Carnell. “Thom Carnell is a writer whose fiction has been featured in Swank magazine (adult content), Carpe Noctem magazine, and in the horror anthology Bloody Carnival from Pill Hill Press. He is best known for his insightful interviews and profiles in Carpe Noctem, Fangoria magazine, and on Dread Central & Twitchfilm.com. His novels (No Flesh Shall Be Spared, No Flesh Shall Be Spared: Don’t Look Back, and the upcoming Monolith Records) and short story collections (Moonlight Serenades, A String of Pearls, Tuxedo Junction, Horror Book, Tales from the Lazaretto, and the upcoming Open Late) are available through Amazon.com and Crossroad Press. Carnell is a graduate of the San Francisco College of Mortuary Science and worked as a certified eye enucleist and a Registered Polysomnographic Technologist. He lives in Bellingham, WA.” — adapted from Thom’s website at https://www.thomcarnell.com. Our extensive talk explores the connection between horror and humor, the lingering creative influence of early trauma and exposure to mortality, marketing cross-genre work, building a community of readers, the perspective and experience that comes with age, and lots, lots more. Also, your host tries to run a giveaway, and makes an offer. This episode was recorded on June 24, 2024. The interview portion was recorded on January 24, 2024. Links and Topics Mentioned in This Episode My latest work of fiction is “Reggie vs Kaiju Storm Dragon Squidbat.” Who was Esther Williams? What’s all this about bathing beauties? Fantasist Clive Barker is mentioned a few times in this episode. Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder comes up. Who is Jeffery Combs? Ike Quebec and Buddy Collette were American jazz saxophonists. Jazz big band composer Duke Ellington on keeping a band together (video clip). The Stoker Awards. Rodney Dangerfield was a well-loved genius among comedians. Horror author Jack Ketchum. Big thanks to my Multiversalists patron community, including J. C. Hutchins, Zoë Kohen Ley, Jim Lewinson, Amelia Bowen, Ted Leonhardt, and Charles Anderson! I’m incredibly grateful for the support of my patrons. If Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick brings you joy, become a patron! One of the perks of being a patron Multiversalist is receiving the uncut, unedited edition of every podcast episode. This time around, patrons get to hear almost forty minutes of additional conversation between Thom Carnell and myself. There’s a lot of good stuff I had to “cut for time” for the public episode! Become a patron and hear the rest! Every month net earnings from my Multiversalist patron memberships is at least $100, I will donate 10% to 826 National in support of literacy and creative writing advocacy for children. Let’s go! This episode has extra content only available for patron members of the Multiversalists community! If you're a patron member at the Bronze level or above, please log in! Click here to learn more about the benefits of membership. This content is by Matthew Wayne Selznick and came from his website.
Empezamos la semana celebrando los 10 años que cumple hoy 'Lazaretto', segundo disco en solitario de Jack White y, sin duda, uno de los mejores trabajos de uno de los padres del rock contemporáneo. Como novedades, destacamos 'El entusiasmo' de Biznaga -primer y emocionante single de su próximo disco-, 'Nuevas metas' de levitants -tercer avance de su futuro álbum-, y lo último de Kaleo, Creeping Jean, Gum & Ambrose Kenny-Smith y Alfie Templeman.Playlist:JACK WHITE - LazarettoJACK WHITE - High Ball StepperJACK WHITE - I Think I Found The CulpritJACK WHITE - Would You Fight For My Love?JACK WHITE - ParallelJACK WHITE - Alone In My HomeJACK WHITE - That Black Bat LicoriceROYAL BLOOD - Ten Tonne SkeletonROYAL BLOOD - Figure It OutRIVAL SONS - Wild AnimalCREEPING JEAN - Sassy Got ShakesBAND OF HORSES - CrutchLEVITANTS - SofisticadoLEVITANTS - Nuevas metasBIZNAGA - El entusiasmoANABEL LEE - Natural para VogueKING GIZZARD & THE LIZARD WIZARD - Hate Dancin'GUM & AMBROSE KENNY-SMITH - Ill TimesPOND - So LoPOND - America's CupALFIE TEMPLEMAN - Eyes Wide ShutLORDE - Take Me to the RiverST. VINCENT - Big Time NothingLADY BANANA - Bora BoraTHE WARNING - Automatic SunKALEO - Rock N RollerTHE BLACK CROWES - Rats and ClownsEscuchar audio
Conversamos con Joanna Pirod –periodista musical– de su recomendación Lazaretto de Jack White 2o álbum de estudio. Este vinilo comienza a sonar del centro hacia afuera y también se escucha música dentro de la etiqueta.Programa transmitido el 17 de abril de 2024. Escucha Esto no es un noticiero con Nacho Lozano, en vivo de lunes a viernes de 1:00 p.m. a 2:00 p.m. por el 105.3 de FM. Esta es una producción de Radio Chilango.
https://www.virginradio.it/audio/long-playing-stories/1362024/long-playing-stories-jack-white-lazaretto.htmlhttps://www.virginradio.it/audio/long-playing-stories/1362024/long-playing-stories-jack-white-lazaretto.htmlFri, 12 Jan 2024 09:49:15 +0100Virgin RadioVirgin Radiono0
Mother knows best. To unlock more episodes, have an ad-free experience, and access rich lore-expanding bonus content, join the fold over on Midst.co as a paid subscriber! Midst is an audio drama in which three mischievous narrators spin a surreal, reality-bending, sci-fantasy, space western about a crotchety outlaw, a struggling cultist, and a diabolical bastard making awful decisions in a world on the edge of disaster. Some themes and situations that occur in-show may be difficult for some to handle. If certain episodes or scenes become uncomfortable, we strongly suggest taking a break or skipping that particular episode.Your health and well-being is important to us and Psycom has a great list of international mental health resources, in case it's useful: http://bit.ly/PsycomResources Midst is created by Third Person Original Music and Episode Icon Art by Third PersonAdditional music by 5 Alarm and freesound.org Follow us!Website: https://www.midst.coTwitter: https://twitter.com/midstpodcast Instagram: https://instagram.com/midstpodcast Find our merch at midst.co Midst is a Metapigeon production in partnership with and distributed by Critical Role Productions
Last time we spoke about the defense of Finschhafen. Finschhafen was a enormous staging camp for the allies now. The Japanese could not sit idly by allowing such a strategic location to be in allied hands. General Katagiri launched a major counter offensive, kicked off with signal fires from Sattelberg. He sent a force of raiders to try and neutralise some heavy allied artillery, but it ended in failure. Having not neutralised their big guns, the rest of the counter offensive fell to pieces. The Japanese would officially report 422 killed, 662 wounded. For the Australians they had 228 casualties of which 49 were dead. With the counter offensive done with, the allies now would go back on the offensive. The next large target was going to be the stronghold of sattelberg, but the Japanese were not going to make it easy on the allies. But today we are going to be jumping into some new places. This episode is the invasion of the treasury islands Welcome to the Pacific War Podcast Week by Week, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about world war two? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on world war two and much more so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel you can find a few videos all the way from the Opium Wars of the 1800's until the end of the Pacific War in 1945. For quite some time now we have been focusing on the New Guinea campaign, such as the offensives against Finschhafen and the Ramu valley. Today we are going to enter a new phase of the Pacific War. With the incoming invasions of the Gilbert and Marshall islands, the Northern Solomons and Western New Britain, General Douglas MacArthur and Admirals Hasley and Nimitz were going to turn up the heat. Admiral Halsey had just seized Vila, Barakoma, Munda and Rendova, gaining their valuable airfields for the forces of General Twinings AirSols to utilise. Within the central Solomons, Bougainville was finally within range of allied land-based aircraft. Lae, Salamaua and Finschhafen were taken, thus Operation Cartwheel would begin a new phase. Back in July, plans were formed for General Vandegrifts 1st Marine Amphibious corps to seize airfields sites at Buin and Kahili, the important Japanese anchorage at Tonolei Harbor, and the Faisi and Ballale islands in the neighboring Shortlands. That same month, the 43rd and 37th divisions were involved in the New Georgia campaign. Of the 5 divisions remaining under his control, Admiral Halsey planned to use the fresh and unblooded 3rd Marine division and the Army's 25th division for the invasion. He sought to keep the 2nd marine division and 3rd new zealand division in training for the conquest of Rabaul. Yet things had changed. Because of the intense resistance on New Georgia, the 25th division had to be committed. Then the decision to strike Makin and Tarawa in the Gilbert islands removed the 2nd marine division from Hasley's south pacific area. These changes ultimately dictated he would need a substitution, and it was to be the 37th division, whom had suffered 1100 casualties on New Georgia already. Nevertheless the 37th was in better condition than the 25th. The 3rd marine divisions task went unchanged. Major General Allen Turnage's 3rd Marine division was going to spearhead the invasion of Bougainville, with a launch date set for September. On top of this Halsey had received some reports indicating the Japanese were heavily reinforcing the Shortland Islands. He decided to bypass them and hit the Treasury island and Choiseul. It is also possible Halsey sought to perform these actions hoping to lure out the Japanese fleet into a major engagement. The treasury islands and Choiseul were lightly garrisoned, but held airfields that could be turned against Bougainville. Meanwhile , General MacArthur was planning the next stepping stone towards the Philippines. His overall plan was to break the Bismarcks Barrier through a series of aggressive leaps along the New Guinea-Mindanao axis. New Guinea as we are all quite familiar with by now, is a logistical nightmare. Lush jungles, raging rivers, cold mountains, every time of geographical nightmare was present. Thus to traverse the western landmass of it only on land was not exactly desired. What MacArthur's logistical team sought was to secure the 50 mile expanse of sea lying between New Guinea and New Britain. With that in hand Admiral Barbey's 7th Amphibious force would be able to transport troops along the coast, a significantly easier method than having the poor boys battle through the jungle. Rooke Island split the sea into the Vitiaz Strait and the narrower Dampier Strait. General Wootten's 9th Australian division were currently fighting for control of Vitiaz, but there had been no effort to date to hit the Dampier. MacArthur decided to capture Kavieng and the Admiralty Islands, because they represented enemy aerial threats against his westwards push through New Guinea. Closing in on the end of the year he also planned to amphibious assault Cape Gloucester, the northwestern point of New Britain which commanded the Dampier Strait. In hindsight the wisdom of landing at Cape Gloucester seems rather dubious. It was not necessary to seize the point in order to make use of the Vitiaz or Dampier strait. The Japanese did not have big artillery on the western end of New Britain to command the channel, the islands infrastructure was largely undeveloped. The only way the Japanese could interfere with the allied use of either strait was by torpedo boats, something they did not have many of. There of course was aircraft based on New Britain as well, but that would be neutralised by Kenney's AirSols. MacArthur planned to have the AirSols hit Rabaul continuously; to seize the Green Islands, the Admiralty Islands and Kavieng. The Western New Britain operation was codenamed Operation Dexterity which would be sub divided into Operations Lazaretto and Backhander. There would be a staggered attack first hitting Gasmata performed by the 2nd battalion, 228th regiment. They would establish an air base in the southern coast of the island, this was operation Lazaretto. Operation Backhander would be the invasion of Cape Gloucester. Some of the landings could be carried out in November, but MacArthur chose to wait until the new airfields were established in the Markham and Ramu valleys as they would provide close air support for the amphibious operations. On September the 10th, Admiral Hasley sent staff to present his plan for the invasion to Bougainville to MacArthur's staff. Halsey would be surprised to find MacArthur opposed using all their aircraft to strike Rabaul before the invasion of western New Britain. MacArthur proposed instead to continue heavy airstrikes against all Japanese airfields on Bougainville throughout October. Then in late October, Halsey's forces could occupy the Treasury islands and possibly northern Choiseul. Northern Choiseul could provide radar coverage and PT boat bases. On the 1st of November, Halsey's forces could then begin landing on Bougainville to form a beachhead before constructing a new airfield to host the AirSols so they could hit Rabaul just in time to take some pressure off MacArthur's troops advancing in New Guinea and New Britain. Thus MacArthur was determined to make the main goal of the operation not the securance over the entirety of Bougainville, but just a portion of it where an aerodrome could be established then used to batter Rabaul. Halsey was presented two options for his landing site: there was Kieta Harbor sitting on the northeast coast and Empress Augusta Bay on the southwest coast. Kieta seemed the better location from which to launch air strikes against Rabaul. Kieta also held a protected harbor, requiring Halsey's forces to move up the longer outside passage to secure Choiseul first. Empress Augusta Bay was on an exposed side of the island during an approaching monsoon season. It was closer to Rabaul and would only require the securing of the Treasury islands first. After further reconnaissance there was indications airfields could be constructed midway up the west coast of Bougainville at Cape Torokina on Empress Augusta Bay. Halsey chose it for the landing site stating on September 22nd “it's Torokina. Now get on your horses!” The operation against Cape Torokina was codenamed Cherryblossom and its task was handed to the hero of Guadalcanal, General Vandegrift who formed the plans but it would not be he who lead the operation. Vandegrit was promoted to commandant of the Marines, the first serving marine to become a four star general, he had to depart for Washington. His replacement was Major General Charles Barrett the former commander of the 3rd Marine division. Barret was given command of the 1st Marine Amphibious corps and the responsibility over operation Cherryblossom. His mission statement read “land in the vicinity of Cape Torokina, seize and occupy and defend a beachhead including Torata Island and adjacent island— 3,750 yards west of Cape Torokina—allowing approximately 2,250 yards inland from the beach and 3,600 yards east of Cape Torokina. To prepare and continue the attack in coordination with the 37th Infantry on arrival.” However the mission statement was to be his last major contribution to the war. On October 8th Barrett accidentally fell from the third floor of the officers quarters at Noumea and suffered a cerebral haemorrhage. He soon died afterwards and was recorded as an accidental death, but there was heavy speculation it was in fact a suicide. Thus the job fell to Major General Roy Geiger, the director of the marine aviation corp in washington. For the naval aspect of the mission Hasley had to do with what he had on hand. He would not be receiving any significant naval reinforcements, because Admiral Nimitz feared that any vessels lent to the 3rd fleet would not be able to come back in time to help with the invasion of the Gilberts. What Halsey could count on was task force 38 commanded by Rear Admiral Frederick Sherman built around carrier Saratoga and later joined by the Princeton; Admiral Merrills task for 39 comprised of cruiser division 12 and destroyer division 23; and Task force 31 commanded by Admiral Wilkinson consisting of three destroyer squadrons, transports and covering ships. It would be Admiral Wilkinson who would bring over the 3rd marine division, the 1st brigade and 3rd New Zealand division to invade the Treasury islands. Rear Admiral George Fort would take the reigns of the first offensive and Wilkinson would looked over the Torokina landings. Wilkinson would have 12 Attack transports and Amphibious cargo ships for the landings, just enough to get every echelon with their equipment over. The 3rd Marine division was reinforced with the 3rd marine defence battalion, the 198th coast artillery, the 2nd provisional marine raider regiment and the 1st marine parachute regiment. After landing at Cape Torokina they would later be reinforced by General Beightlers 37th division. The 29th, 34th and 36th New Zealander battalions of the 8th brigade group led by Brigadier Robert Row would hit the Treasury islands and help establish long range radar stations and a landing craft staging area. There was a final last minute change to the overall plan made by Halsey. They decided not to attempt seizing northern Choiseul but to instead send a marine raiding party around 656-725 men of the US 2nd Parachute battalion led by Lt Colonel Victor Krulak there to persuade the Japanese to divert forces to Choiseul from southern Bougainville. To support the operation General Kenny's 5th air force would smash the airfields in Rabaul while the AirSols 489 aircraft would hit airfields in and around Bougainville. General Twinning tactics were to harass the Japanese every day, so he launched a total of 158 flights in October, comprising 3259 sorties and land and naval targets in Hahili, Kara, Ballale, Buka, Bonis and Choiseul. The result of this incredible air campaign was 5 Japanese airfields pulverized, 136 enemy aircraft claimed destroyed at the cost of 26 allied aircraft shot down. Meanwhile on October 12th, Kenney launched a raid using 349 aircraft smashing airstrips, shipping and supply dumps. The 6000-ton IJN transport Keisho Maru was sunk alongside two smaller craft. On the 18th 54 B-25's took off from Dobodura, but only caused minor damage. On October the 23rd, 24th and 25th daylight raids consisting of 45 B-242's, 62 B-25's and 61 B-24's respectively managed to shoot down 9 enemy planes, destroyed 25 aircraft on the ground and damaged another 27. On October 29th, he tossed a raid at Vunakanau's airdrome using 41 liberators covered by 75 P-38's and managed to destroy around 10 aircraft. The enemies attention was certainly diverted away from Rabaul. Now the Japanese knew an invasion of Bougainville was coming. They believed the main target of such an offensive would be first against the Shortlands or Kahili. General Kanda's 6th division was deployed to reinforce these places. His 1st battalion, 45th regiment was placed at Kieta, the rd battalion and 4th south sea garrison was sent to reinforce Bougainville while the rest were sent to the Shortland islands. Bougainville was given north/south/east/west sectors garrisoned by numerous forces under Kanda. Admiral Koga also launched Operation RO, a plan devised to strengthen Rabaul. Koga's intelligence indicated the Pacific Fleet was on a warpath, so he decided to take the entire combined fleet from Truk to Eniwetok, which Koga considered a good advance position where he could sortie and annihilate the enemy in a decisive naval battle. The combined fleet stayed a week in the uncomfortable and lonely lagoon until they departed having not found the allied pacific fleet. By October 24th the combined fleet travelled back to Truk while the aircrews of carriers Zuikaku, Shokaku and Zuiho reinforced Rabaul. 82 Zeros, 45 D3As, 40 B5Ns and 6 Yokosuka D4Y reconnaissance planes. 192 trained air crews in total would be in Rabaul by November 1st. They were just in time to intercept one of Kenney's raids consisting of 75 b-25's and 80 p-38s. The Japanese airmen claimed to have downed 9 B-25s, 10 P-38s at the cost of 20 aircraft and 3 small vessels. Koga alerted the 12th air fleet who were in Japan to prepare to head over to Rabaul, but instead of also sending the 8th fleet, he kept them back, still thinking a decisive naval battle would be on the menu soon in the central pacific. General Sakai's 17th division were transported to New Britain in late september. Their first echelon comprising of the 53rd regiment arrived on october 5th and immediately began to move west to reinforce Cape Gloucester and the 3rd battalion went to northern Bougainville. The remainder of the 17th division would arrive between November 5th and 12th, though the auxiliary cruiser Kurita Maru caring the 1st battalion, 81st regiment was sunk by the USS Grayson. 1087 men, most of the battalion, were lost. The invasion of the Treasuries codenamed Operation Goodtime. They would establish a staging area, an advanced naval base at Blanche Harbor and a radar station on the north coast of Mono Island. It was hoped the assault on the Treasuries would confused the Japanese as to where the major effort would actually be. At this time there was a short supply of assault forces throughout the Pacific and the Bougainville invasion was mere days away. Thus it was difficult to comprehend why an entire brigade would be used to subdue a tiny enemy garrison on one small island. It has been theorised that Halsey and Vandegrift were reluctant to use some untried New Zealand troops in the more ambitious undertaking, but were also under pressure from their Anzac allies to see some action. For whatever reason the Treasury island operation would be one of the few examples of Allied overkill during the mid Pacific War. The 8th Brigade had limited shipping available to them. They would have eight destroyer transports, eight LCIs, two LSTs, eight LCMs, three LCTs and two APCs, under the command of Admiral Fort who was using the USS Raton as his flagship. The 34th battalion was going to land on the north side of Stirling Island to secure a nearby airfield; the 29th and 36th battalions would land abreast near Falami Point on southern Mono and Major George Logan D company of the 34th, designated Logan force would land at the mouth of the Soanotalu River to establish a radar station with the help of 20 seabees. The USS Pringle and Philip would perform a bombardment to help. The operation was set into motion on October 27th when the convoy departed guadalcanal and the Russells. George Fort's destroyers approached Blanche Harbor during a storm and began their bombardment. The assault waves raced through the harbor in two columns. As was suspected the 34th met zero resistance, they immediately went to work sending out patrols to make certain if there were any Japanese on the island they would not get to surprise them. Mortars were set up on the nearby Watson island, cool theres an island bearing my name to support the landings on Mono. The landings on Mono met very little resistance, basically just a bunch of surprised Japanese naval troops who offered some half hearted gunfire before withdrawing. The New Zealanders went to work establishing a perimeter as the Japanese began opening fire using mortars which managed to knock out two LST's killing 2 and wounding 30 men. Interesting to note this was the first amphibious assault launched by Kiwi's since the horrible Gallipoli campaign of 1916 and it was the second combat operation undertaken by Kiwi's during the Pacific War. The real resistance would come in the form of a air raid consisting of 25 vals who bombed the beachhead and support ships. The destroyers Cony took two hits; eight crewmen were killed and ten wounded. An allied fighter patrol managed to shoot down 12 vals during the raid. To their north, the Logan force faced no difficult landing at the mouth of the Soanotalu river. They quickly formed a 150 yard perimeter and began working on the radar station. By the end of the day, all but one LST had successfully unloaded and cleared Blanche harbor, however during the night the New Zealanders tossed back numerous counter attacks, particular around the Saveke river. By the 28th the Japanese survivors were retreating north in the hope of escaping to Bougainville, but along the way they ran into the Logan Force. On October 29th during the late afternoon, 20 Japanese attacked the western part of the Logan Forces perimeter. They were easily beaten off with mortars and rifle fire, leaving 5 dead Japanese behind. The next day saw some intermittent firing against concealed Japanese. Scouts eventually figured out there was a larger number of Japanese to the west of the perimeter, but the area between Soanotalu and Malasi was clear of the enemy. November began with the rest of the brigade coming over. The radar station was already up and running and the Logan Force had built themselves a small blockhouse near the landing barge. That said blockhouse immediately became the objective of the Japanese, since it represented the only hope of them escaping the island. As Brigadier Row's men began to occupy the central and northern parts of Mono, the Japanese began to infiltrate the Logan Forces perimeter. On the night of November 1st, the main breech was made across the News Zealanders line. A ton of Japanese had infiltrated the lines and managed to cut telephone wires from the blockhouse to the company HQ. Soon after this was accomplished a concerted attack was made against the blockhouse. 6 New Zealanders and 3 Americans defended it. They had automatic weapons, some 50 and 30 cal machine guns, but they were soon put out of action by the attacking Japanese who could have numbered between 70-100 men. The fight for the blockhouse would continue until dawn, with the surviving defenders beating off numerous attacks, mainly by tossing grenades. Captain Kirk, Sergeant DD Hannafin were both killed during the fight. Command of the blockhouse then fell to a cook of D Company, Private J.E Smith. By daybreak the Japanese finally were beaten off as the 3 remaining survivors were all wounded. 26 Japanese had been killed trying to overrun the blockhouse and seize the landing craft. Elsewhere across the perimeter the Japanese attacked throughout the night seeing another 15 dead Japanese in the western section and 9 in the east. It was to be there best chance at taking the blockhouse, for the next few days their attacks were much smaller and by November 4th, New Zealander patrols were fanning out and killing or capturing stragglers. The last significant action on Mono would be on November 6th when a dozen Japanese were routed from a cave during a two hour firefight east of Soanatalu. Operation Goodtime resulted in the annihilation of a Japanese garrison roughly 200 men strong, but it came at a cost. 40 New Zealanders and 12 Americans were killed with 174 wounded. The allies got their supply bases and radar station. Over on Choiseul, Operation Blissful was about to kick off. In an attempt to make the Japanese believe the Shortland islands were the target for their offensive, General Vandegrift tossed Lt Colonel Victor Krulaks 2nd Parachute battalion, roughly 656 men at a beach near the village of Voza. On October 27th the men and their equipment were loaded onto 8 LCMS and during the night the paratroopers were transferred over to four destroyer transports, the Kilty, Ward, Crosby and McKean, the same ships that had just been used to transport the New Zealanders for Operation Goodtime. Forts destroyers provided escort as the Paramarine landed at Voza shortly after midnight without any resistance. During the morning of the 28th they began unloading supplies from landing crafts that had been concealed on a smaller island offshore. Once landed they carried them up a narrow trail leading from the beach a mile northwest of Voza upon some high ground which would be their first base camp. Nearly a hundred friendly natives helped the marines carry the equipment up the beach and they also helped guide the men. Allied radio broadcasting finally alerted the Japanese to the imminent danger to southern Bougainville as Krulaks men began establishing their perimeter. The morning of the 29th brought an enemy strafing attack upon them and the native guides reported to Krulak that there was a barge staging base at Sangigai, the main Japanese position on Choiseul bay, garrisoned by around 150 men. Krulak decided that was to be the first objective, he sent out patrols going north and south. In the north Lt Averill with the help of native guides discover considerable evidence of the Japanese presence, abandoned equipment and rations, but no Japanese. In the south two patrols scouted the Japanese base near Sangigai. Krulak led one of the patrols personally and managed to surprise some Japanese who were unloading a barge. They killed 7 Japanese and sunk the barge before pulling out. The other patrol group ran into a Japanese platoon and got into a skirmish seeing another 7 dead Japanese. Thus Krulak got his confirmation there indeed was a Japanese base at Sangigai. Early on the 30th, Krulak requested an air strike at it arrived at 6am. 12 Avengers with 26 fighter escorts hit Sangigai. Unfortunately some of the planes mistook the marines at Voza for the enemy and strafed them as well. No marines were killed but one of their boats was sunk, that Krulak had planned to use. As a result of the boat getting sunk, Companies E and 5 departed Voza overland to hit Sangigai. A Japanese outpost along the Vagara river opened fire on the paratroopers, but was easily overwhelmed. Krulak then divided his forces to perform a two pronged assault. Company E led by Captain Robert Manchester would advance along the coastline to hit the Japanese from the north, while Krulak with Company F would move inland to hit them from the rear. Company E quickly advanced along the coast and began shelling the town with mortars and rockets during the afternoon, only to find out it was abandoned. The Japanese had taken up a new position on some high grounder in the interior. So the paramarines began destroying and looting the village. Meanwhile company F were advancing through rough terrain to try and secure some high ground near Sangigai where the retreating Japanese were just passing through. The Japanese literally walked right into F company and a hour long fight broke out. The Japanese outnumbered F company and as Krulak would later report “the outcome appeared to be in question, until the Japs destroyed their chances by an uncoordinated banzai charge which was badly cut up by our machine guns. Seventy-two Japs were killed and an undetermined number wounded. Marine losses were 6 killed, 1 missing and 12 wounded." The marines had 6 deaths, 12 wounded and one man missing. Krulak was wounded as well as F companies commander Spencer Pratt. The Japanese suffered a devastating 72 casualties Back over at E company after plundering the village they came across some documents and Krulak reported "The one that fascinated me, it was a chart that portrayed the minefields around southern Bougainville. When I reported this, the night after the Sangigai attack, I saw my first flash message. I had never seen one before. It came back and said, "Transmit at once the coordinates of the limits of the minefields and all channels as shown going through it." So we laboriously encoded the critical locations and sent them off. To an armada going into that area this is not incidental information. This is necessary information. Halsey in true Halsey fashion was not satisfied to know where the minefields were; he, before the Torokina landings, sent in a minelayer there and dropped mines in the entrance ways to those channels and they got two Japanese ships.” E company then retired to the Vagara river and was later evacuated by boat back to the Voza area. F company followed suite but was delayed by the heavy engagement they had. The men stayed to bury their dead. The friendly natives reported a Japanese concentration to the north near the Warrior River, so Krulak sent a strong patrol up by boat to check it out. On November 1, the large patrol of 87 paratroopers from Company G, led by Major Warner Bigger, headed north by landing craft towards Nukiki with orders "destroy the southern outposts of CHOISEUL BAY, and if possible to shell the Jap supply depot on GUPPY ISLAND." Major Bigger began an overland march along the eastern bank of the river and after crossing the warrior, their native guides became lost so they all had to bivouac for the night. In the early morning of November 2nd, Biggers men found themselves surrounded by Japanese who began infiltrating their perimeter from the rear. Bigger had the men continue north along the beach where the surprise attacked a small enemy outpost of 4 men. They managed to kill 3 of 4, but the last man ran away, thus the element of surprise was gone. Bigger knew the jig was up he could not hope to attack the main objective so instead he ordered the men to go shell Guppy island. G Company setup some 60mm mortars in the water and fired 143 rounds at the island setting up two large fires, one looked to have hit a fuel dump. The Japanese were taken by surprise there and only offered resistance in the form of some poorly directed machine gun bursts. On the way back G company had to fight their way through because of the infiltrators. Krulak was notified of the situation and alerted a PT boat base at Vella Lavella. Lt Arthur Berndtson had 5 PT boats under his command there, 2 were already assigned to other missions, another was under repair. PT 59 only had ⅓ tanks worth of fuel, but her commander, Lt John F Kennedy, yes he is back in action, agreed to rescue the boys. Kennedy believed he had enough fuel to get to Choiseul and another boat could tow them back to base. Despite overheating the engines, at around 9:30 PT 59 escorted a small convoy to Voza and Bigger's men were off loaded. The PT-59 ran out of fuel on the return trip down the slot and was towed back to Lambu Lambu Cove. By this point the landings at Cape Torokina had been carried out, so a diversion was not really needed anymore. Furthermore the Japanese were moving in on the base camp from all directions. On the night of November 3rd, just in the nick of time, 3 LCIs from Vella Lavella arrived to successfully load Krulaks paratroopers and got them out of there before dawn of the 4th. The Paratroopers had been outnumbered 6-1. They managed to kill an estimated 143 Japanese, destroyed a major staging base at Sangigai, sunk two barges and destroyed a considerable amount of enemy fuel and supplies on Guppy island. The cost was 13 dead and 13 wounded. Krulaks after action report mentioned evidence that the Japanese had sent reinforcements from the Shortland islands to counter the Choiseul operation. On November 1st, the day of the Cape Torokina landings, the Japanese had sent a large bomer force south to Choiseul hunting a reported Task Force. The Japanese found nothing, and by the time they diverted back to Empress Augusta Bay, the landings were done, American fighters were ready to deal with them. It seems the Japanese had been greatly confused from all the activity around Bougainville, particularly from many intercepted messages. Its hard to say how successful the Choiseul raid actually was. It's possible the Japanese fell for the diversion, but no one really knows. I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. The diversionary raids may or may not have had an effect on the landings at Cape Torokina. Regardless the multiple operations were all successful and the Japanese seemed none the wiser. Now the stranglehold over Bougainville would begin.
Intro/Outro: Love Potion #930. Lazaretto by Jack White29. Bone Broke by The White Stripes28. 300 M.P.H. Torrential Outpour Blues by The White Stripes27. You Don't Know What Love Is (You Just Do As You're Told) by The White Stripes26. I've Got You Surrounded (With My Love) by Jack White
Before the advent of the germ theory of disease in the 1870s, quarantine provided one of the few effective means to prevent or alleviate epidemics. The Lazaretto quarantine station in Philadelphia illustrates the history of quarantine both before and after the discovery of pathogenic microbes. With us to explore the history of 18th and 19th century quarantine in Philadelphia, and what it meant for public health, is David Barnes. David teaches the history of medicine and public health at the University of Pennsylvania, where he is an Associate Professor of History and Sociology of Science. David received a BA in history from Yale in 1984 and a Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Berkeley in 1992. His books include The Making of a Social Disease: Tuberculosis in Nineteenth-Century France (University of California Press, 1995), The Great Stink of Paris and the Nineteenth-Century Struggle against Filth and Germs (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006), and Lazaretto: How Philadelphia Used an Unpopular Quarantine Based on Disputed Science to Accommodate Immigrants and Prevent Epidemics (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023).
Jagbags favorite Sherrie Adams joins Jagbags once again and this time the subject is Jack White. Which albums are his best? What incarnation was better -- White Stripes, the Raconteurs, or the Dead Weather? Sherrie goes through her top 5 albums with the guys and listens politely as they list their incorrect choices. Beave reads faxes from a hurt Bruce Springsteen, wondering when Sherrie would like to talk about his music -- while Sherrie pronounces him the "Middle Manager" as opposed to "The Boss". We also talk Jack White's guacamole scandal, and why specifically he hates the Black Keys. Tune in for ultimate rock riffs!
Jonathan and Richard dive into the distinct musical world of Jack White. The White Stripes John Peel session, Elephants, and Lazaretto are sure to rock your constitution.
Daru Jones, ganador de 2 premios Grammy, baterista, sesionista, productor, ha colaborado con nombres desde Gloria Gaynor, NAS, Queen Latifah, Rag ´N Bone Man, también Jack White con quien ha trabajado en estudio y de gira los últimos 10 años, desde "Lazaretto" hasta su último "Fear Of The Dawn".Un artista con un background cristiano estadounidense, en el que desde los 4 años ha logrado crear su propio camino Y SONIDO hasta llevarlo a ser considerado como uno de los mejores bateristas de esta generación, desde el hip-hop, jazz, rock & Roll y más.Este episodio es para tripear las dinámicas que tiene una carrera artística desde que la empiezas a temprana edad y logras la manera de hacerla tu carrera.Producido por: TripeaEn Coproducción con: Viaducto Visual RadioHost: Erick MujicaMúsica original de TripeaSíguenos en Instagram: https://bit.ly/3nHi8xISíguenos en Twitter: https://bit.ly/3xg6mj9Escucha nuestra playlist: https://spoti.fi/2UHhaoWEscríbenos a tripea.ec@gmail.com www.ruidosacaracola.com
Join the Cumberland River Compact as we hear from Dr. Learotha Williams from Tennessee State University about the story of Hill's Island. Learn more about Hill's Island: https://cumberlandrivercompact.org/explore/hills-island/ Hill's Island–a space originally occupied by Native Americans—bears the name of one of the most revered slave traders in the antebellum South. Although largely inaccessible to the general public, is an area of the city that has an odd and mildly frenzied history. It became home to an enslaved African whose appearance frightened one of Nashville's founding families and also served as a Lazaretto or quarantine station for enslaved Blacks who had recently arrived in Middle Tennessee. As an antebellum historical site, it sits in the Cumberland as a monument to Nashville's first “Big Business.” A century later it would become a recreational space for the city's well-to-do population, leased out as a space that could host summer camps, and under the auspices of the Seven Day Adventist Church, its history would be closely associated with education and religion in the Athens of the South. This period in its history marks Nashville's transition into a major Southern city. Today Hill's island sits in the Cumberland as one of the few pristine, undeveloped sites in the city. There is still much to learn about its antebellum past and the lives of Native Americans and enslaved Blacks who lived there, its role as a recreational space, and its overall role in the history of the Music City. As we consider its history in the 21st century Nashville, we grapple with how to reanimate and share these histories with new audiences. This project is funded in part by a grant from Humanities Tennessee, an independent affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional Acknowledgments: Jasmine Spears of Tennessee State University, Tennessee State Museum staff of Jeff Sellers and Miranda Fraley, Aaron Deter-Wolf of the Tennessee Division of Archaeology, Steve Haruch and Andrea Tudhope of WPLN, and Andrew Ostrowski of Pontoon Saloon (who helps bring us out the island!) Previous episode about Hill's Island: https://cumberlandrivercompact.org/2021/06/16/tenngreen-land-conservancy-gifts-hills-island-to-cumberland-river-compact/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thecompact/message
This episode explores Jack White's second solo album, Lararetto, and his third and perhaps final Dead Weather album, Dodge and Burn.--Jack White rose to legendary musician status via his breakthrough band, The White Stripes. Coming out as a blues rock, punk aesthetic garage rock band with child-like drummer Meg White, The White Stripes paved the way for a lot of acts to come. As their success grew, Jack White branched out into other projects, including the classic rock inspired "super group" The Raconteurs, and Led Zeppelin-spirit revival, hard as nails "super group," The Dead Weather. As Jack gained momentum elsewhere, The White Stripes came to an end, leaving room for Jack White to explore a solo career. Throughout his solo career, he started honing his comfort material -- country, blues, and fuzz rock -- moving toward new grounds with experimental noise, high tech production, and unexpected plot twists.Tyler, being a conseur of pop and knower of all things music, and Greg, a Jack White super fan, have a lot to say on Jack White, including a plethora of insights and context into the creation of this music, the cultural impact of Jack White and his embedded philosophies, and the growth of self and artist.
Acclaimed for crafting ''sharply drawn characters, exuberant prose,'' and ''plenty of period detail'' (Los Angeles Times Book Review), Diane McKinney-Whetstone is the author of six novels, including Tumbling, Tempest Rising, Trading Dreams at Midnight, and Lazaretto, a historical novel set in a legendary 19th-century Philadelphia quarantine hospital. A two-time recipient of the American Library Association Black Caucus Literary Award for fiction and winner of a Zora Neale Hurston Society Award, she taught creative writing at the University of Pennsylvania for 12 years and has contributed writing to The Atlantic, Essence, and Philadelphia Magazine. In Our Gen, McKinney-Whetstone follows the residents of a Philadelphia-area active-living retirement community who revert to the passions and excesses of their youth. (recorded 7/19/2022)
In this episode, the artificial intelligence Lexman interviews Josh Barnett about his time spent in Boston and his experience as a prisoner at the lazaretto. They discuss the notorious top-sail vessel, the seamark, and the extermination of the Cantabrigians.
Jack White is one of modern rock's most eccentric performers. So how does his first of two new albums being released in 2022 - the harder-edge sounding "Fear of the Dawn" - stand up against his vast catalog that spans multiple bands and solo offerings? Find out what Matt and Zach think in Epic Footnote Productions' “2 Minutes to Review,” a podcast that's part album review and part competition. In each episode, both hosts are given two minutes each to review a newly released album or a classic record they're revisiting. Whoever gives the longest review in under two minutes wins. Available to stream on any platform you can imagine found here: https://linktr.ee/epicfootnote! Also watch us unbox an Ultra LP vinyl copy of White's “Lazaretto”: https://youtu.be/Vpejj0VWKfo Also stream our album review of White's last album with the Raconteurs, “Help Us, Stranger”: https://youtu.be/HlXwT63q_p8 Also watch co-host Zach show off his translucent blue/white vinyl copy of Ghost's debut album “Opus Eponymous”: https://youtu.be/tMg15t1m7h8 Sponsored by: - Lucky 13 Beard Co.: head over to https://lucky13beardco.com/ and listen to this episode for a special code that will give you 10% OFF your order of quality, made-to-order beard care products! And also try our VERY OWN beard oil inspired by the legendary Lemmy Kilmister: https://lucky13beardco.com/products/1oz-beard-oil-lemmy - Rootless Coffee Co.: head over to https://rootlesscoffee.com/ and listen to this episode for a special code that will give you 15% OFF your order of coffee blends that break free from boring. #JackWhite #FearOfTheDawn #AlbumReview #NewAlbum #NewMusic #WhiteStripes #TheWhiteStripes #Raconteurs #TheRaconteurs #DeadWeather #TheDeadWeather #QTip #ThirdManRecords #EnteringHeavenAlive #Rock #GarageRock #Blues #BluesRock #AltRock #TakingMeBack #FearOfTheDawn #TheWhiteRaven #HiDeHo #Eosophobia #IntoTheTwilight #Dusk #WhatsTheTrick #ThatWasThenThisIsNow #MorningNoonAndNight #SheddingMyVelvet
Writers Geoff Manaugh and Nicky Twilley take us inside a crumbling, centuries-old quarantine facility, and we explore the history and future of quarantine.Read “Until Proven Safe: The History and Future of Quarantine”: https://untilprovensafe.com/Learn more about the Malta Lazzaretto: https://www.midimalta.com/en/the-lazaretto
Our show is an open book, take a look! And if you do... you might just find our latest album analysis & review episode waiting for you -- highlighting 2011's epic ROME project, originated by Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi and contributed to by the likes of Jack White, Nora Jones and more! Sometimes referred to as one of the "lost" Jack White solo projects, this album of gorgeous material intended to evoke the feeling of classic "spaghetti westerns" like The Good the Bad and the Ugly was a playground for soundtrack enthusiast Brian Burton (aka Danger Mouse), who made a name for himself as DJ and producer on such projects as The Grey Album and both hit records by Gnarles Barkley. Of course, when Jack White was approached to contribute both lyrics and vocals to several tracks on the record, Jack jumped at the chance to participate in one of the grandest musical experiments of the decade, and explore time as a solo artist in the era prior to Blunderbuss, Lazaretto and the other personal projects that would see the light of day over the course of the next decade on TMR. Joining us for this discussion today is Coppersound Pedals brainchild Alex Guaraldi, whose triplegraph pedal has graced many a Third Man release for years now. We'd like to thank Alex for joining us on this journey and hope you all enjoy listening to this discussion as much as we enjoyed having it! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
#95-91Intro/Outro: Grinnin' in Your Face by Son House95. Journey (Open Arms & Separate Ways (Worlds Apart))94. Switchfoot (Gone & Meant to Live)93. Kendrick Lamar (Humble & Alright)92. R.E.M. (Radio Free Europe & The One I Love)91. Jack White (Over and Over and Over & Lazaretto)
Recorded at the Mockingbird Conference in OKC, 2016. Property of Mockingbird Ministries, all rights reserved (www.mbird.com).
Photo: Tomb of Mithridates, near the Lazaretto of Kertch, Crimea.Creator: Bossoli, Carlo, 1815-1884 (delineator); Walker, Edmund, active 1836-1882 (lithographer).Contributors: Day & Son (publisher); June 9, 1856.CBS Eye on the World with John BatchelorCBS Audio Network@BatchelorshowResolving Ukraine at Geneva now. Anatol Lieven, @QuincyInsthttps://112.international/ukraine-top-news/ukraine-us-coordinate-positions-on-the-eve-of-geneva-summit-62095.html
El más que polivalente, el genial Jack White, con "Lazaretto": su último disco publicado este 2014.
El más que polivalente, el genial Jack White, con "Lazaretto": su último disco publicado este 2014.
The Lazaretto is a beautiful, stately building in Tinicum Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. It's also the last surviving quarantine hospital in the United States. It has an incredible history, and it's been hiding in plain sight for decades. David Barnes, Associate Professor of History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania joins KYW Newsradio in Depth to talk about the history of the Lazaretto and its role in keeping infectious disease from entering Philadelphia and the United States. Check out the Lazaretto online at http://lazaretto.site/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In the first episode of Hanukkah we decide that Lazaretto is a rebranded pickup trucks in other countries or some kind of music thing, we talk about different emoji dialects, things we’re sort of advertising, Chris’ D&D workflow, Friday rituals, activated tomatoes, and silence. Things we’re not advertising (but we’re kind of advertising): Radiolab DeployHQ … Continue reading "Episode 1101110: Lazaretto"
Hello fellow music fans, Paul here from The Third Men Podcast. We're taking a break from our regularly scheduled programming this week to pay tribute to a giant in the world of music podcasting - our dear friend Ryan Brady. News of Ryan's passing has left us shocked, saddened, and in need of a pause to reflect upon the enormous impact he had on us. If you've listened to our show, then you've heard Ryan's voice - whether it be walking through Lazaretto or spinning elaborate webs of Beatle trivia or making our dad laugh with his sharp wit. Ryan was an amazing talent - a musician, a businessman, record executive and a pioneer in music podcasting (with his incredible show Take It Away alongside co-creator Chris Mercer)...but most of all he was a friend. He supported us, helped show us the way forward, and he's left an incredible mark upon our lives. James and I recorded this mini-episode just to say "thank you" to Ryan, and that we love him & his family. We'll be back next week with a full, new episode, but we hope you'll join us now in tipping our hats to the "great connector". Love you, Ryan - enjoy every sandwich. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Join us in a discussion. of art via sound... There's only One Direction or Four? Or just go the Lazaretto! Take it easy in Lazaretto.
As you may know, Paul is a Jack White enthusiast, so you better believe us talking about Jack's 2014 album Lazaretto is a big deal. Such a big deal that Paul's brother James shows up to teach Ryan a thing or two about John Anthony "The Third Man" Gillis. An album partly inspired by White's own secret, lost, attic poems written when he was 19, and by kicking his legs out from under himself and diving into the magic music kitchen sink, Lazaretto sounds as if all of the best parts of Jack's career (up to that point) got drunk and THEN decided to go to a roadhouse and put on a show. Blue is the color and for good reason because red and black are long gone. Do yourself a favor and look up the definition of the LP title. Now hear this: "Three Women," "Lazaretto," "Would You Fight for My Love?", and "Just One Drink." Have something to say? Email us: nowhearthisofficial@gmail.comIf you want to listen to the music discussed on the show, then subscribe to this playlist: https://nowhearthis.lnk.to/theplaylist See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
How's quarantine going? Drinking gasoline again? Well, behave yourself (!) and listen to the second installment in the three-part epic we could only call - LAZARETTO: Album Analysis & Review! When last we left our deep dive, the massive success and excess creative energy brought about by the Blunderbuss project gave way to instrumental sessions that would eventually evolve into Jack White's second solo album. With lyrics cribbed from some teenage hand-scribbles discovered in White's attic, Lazaretto at last came to life in the early summer months of 2014 - to massive sales and fanfare. This episode, we welcome special guest Ryan Brady (Take it Away: the Complete Paul McCartney Archive Podcast) back to the show to walk through the entire track listing of Lazaretto with us as we spelunk the cavernous depths of Jack White's infinite imagination. (But that's not all Ryan will be helping us do! Tune in May 15th for the continuation of Ryan, Paul and James' Lazaretto discussion on the NOW HEAR THIS podcast!) All this, plus album reception, the answer to the mystery cover shoot location, Dirk the Butt Guy, our own personal rating of the album and much, much more awaits you in this massive lily pad of an episode. So pour yourself just one drink and bring those troubles of yours right down to their knees - we're here fighting for your love on the Third Men Podcast! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Bored rotten during quarantine? The Third Men Podcast is here to pass you some coffee, cotton and a new entry into our deepest of deep-dive episodes - it's LAZARETTO: Analysis & Review vol.1 (of 3)! For Jack White's sophomore solo LP, the third man took the lessons of his smash debut Blunderbuss and expanded them into one of the most complex recordings of his entire career, spanning 18 months, dozens of musicians, and an unlikely co-writing partnership with...himself? During touring breaks in 2012, Jack and his two bands, the Buzzards and the Peacocks, would lock themselves in the studio to lay down some badass instrumental music which varied wildly in genre, tempo and structure. With these collections of sound pictures safely in the vault, Jack & co would return to their world tour...but how would White apply lyrics to music he was so subsequently disconnected from? Enter Jack White's 19 year old self, appearing in the form of plays, poetry, lyrics and other assorted mind-scribblings unearthed in an attic and ripe for the picking. This blend of past and present would establish a new and exciting trajectory for Jack White's musical future, and this week we get into the nitty gritty on just how that story came to be. Plus, Third Person Derrik Ferguson takes us on a tour of HIS Jack White past in the form of some incredible concerts in each of Jack's various incarnations over the past 20 years. It's all here in part one of a triptych of episodes dedicated to our continued survival down in the Lazaretto... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Review of “Lazaretto” by Jack White Grades: Music A Lyrics A Production A Overall A Email your comments and album suggestions to Feedback@FiveMinuteMusicReviews.com If you’d like to purchase this album, please click here: Follow us on Twitter @FiveMinuteMusic Like us on [...]
Today we’re coming at you with another music episode! On the table today we’ve got Jonathan Coulton’s Artificial Heart and Jack White’s Boarding House Reach, two very distinct and different albums in the alt-rock scene. Join us as we dissect them song-by-song and give our general thoughts. Also, why we hate people who sing along at concerts.
Clay McLeod Chapman is the creator of the storytelling session “The Pumpkin Pie Show” and the author of rest area, nothing untoward, and The Tribe trilogy. He is the co-author, with Nightmare Before Christmas director Henry Selick, of the middle grade novel Wendell and Wild. In the world of comics, Chapman’s work includes Lazaretto, Iron Fist: Phantom Limb, and Edge of Spiderverse. He also writes for the screen, including The Boy, Henley, and Late Bloomer. You can find him at claymcleodchapman.com. Join the Thorne & Cross newsletter for updates, book deals, specials, exclusives, and upcoming guests on Thorne & Cross: Haunted Nights LIVE! by visiting Tamara and Alistair at their websites: alistaircross.com and tamarathorne.com This is a copyrighted, trademarked podcast owned solely by the Authors on the Air Global Radio, LL
Clay McLeod Chapman is the creator of the storytelling session “The Pumpkin Pie Show” and the author of rest area, nothing untoward, and The Tribe trilogy. He is the co-author, with Nightmare Before Christmas director Henry Selick, of the middle grade novel Wendell and Wild. In the world of comics, Chapman’s work includes Lazaretto, Iron Fist: Phantom Limb, and Edge of Spiderverse. He also writes for the screen, including The Boy, Henley, and Late Bloomer. You can find him at claymcleodchapman.com. Join the Thorne & Cross newsletter for updates, book deals, specials, exclusives, and upcoming guests on Thorne & Cross: Haunted Nights LIVE! or visit Tamara and Alistair at their websites. This is a copyrighted, trademarked podcast owned solely by the Authors on the Air Global Radio.
Break out those Yondr pouches, because the show's about to start! Ladies and gentlemen and everyone in-between, the Third Men podcast is proud to present: Jack's Opening Acts! In this first edition of a new on-going series, your humble co-hosts will take you on a tour of Jack White's solo tours, through the lens of his various opening acts - some famous, some up-and-coming, but all memorable in their own ways. For the Blunderbuss, Lazaretto and Boarding House Reach tours, Third Man set about showcasing a wide range of talent, including but not limited to artists in its very own roster. While the expected openers may have been more mainstream rocker acts like Alabama Shakes and Cold War Kids, Jack's solo tours also carried with them a wide range of genre and style - such as hip hop (Run The Jewels, Shirt), country (Joshua Hedley, Loretta Lynn), zone-out instrumental (William Tyler) and many more. In this episode we cover them all, including a very special guest this week in Isaiah Radke, whose band Radkey opened for Jack on the Boarding House Reach tour in 2018! We were thrilled to have Isaiah on the show, and we hope you all enjoy the interview as much as we enjoyed conducting it! So get those tickets ready, there's a rock show coming at you! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Daru Jones is one of the most sought after drummers on the scene today and we're honored to have him as our guest for episode 7 of The Rich Redmond Show! Born in Michigan to two professional musicians, he began playing the drums at the age of four. Though he got his start in the church, Jones has been influenced by musicians from a wide range of genres. ****Watch this episode at https://youtu.be/tORt6Qwyzkw and subscribe to the podcast: http://hyperurl.co/4dwoxc These eclectic musical tastes have carried over into his own career as he has recorded, performed, and toured with renowned artists and producers such as: Jack White, Nas, Talib Kweli, Black Milk, Salaam Remi, Lorenzo Jovanotti, Sturgil Simpson, Kim Burrell, Rance Allen, Esparanza Spalding, Black Violin, Ski Beatz & The Sensei's, and Jon B. Receiving rave reviews from: Rolling Stone Magazine, LA Weekly, and USA Today he has also appeared on several national and international television programs: The David Letterman Show, Jools Holland (UK), The Colbert Report, Saturday Night Live, and MTV. Jones has been the “go-to-drummer” in the hip hop game for nearly a decade. He has shared the stage with legends and emerging stars alike, including: Raekwon, Curren$y, Theophulis London, Pharoahe Monch, Jean Grae, Black Moon, Slum Village, Black Sheep, Digable Planets, Camp_Lo and Large Professor. Jones is also a sought-after producer and boutique label owner who develops talent and releases music through his imprint, RUSIC RECORDS, LLC. 2015 he performed on “Lazaretto”, the first single from Jack White's second solo album of the same name, and helped White to earn a 2015 Grammy for Best Rock Performance. Daru is a new Nashville resident and continues to reinvent his playing. He has also opened the doors to signature product design with his signature drumsticks with Ahead and the PDP drums New Yorker Drumset as well as Paiste PSTX DJ Cymbals. In this episode Rich, Jim and Daru discuss: -The difference of the creative energies of New York, Nashville and Los Angeles -Creative attributes of the astrological sign LEO -Everything happens when it's supposed to -How to think like a businessman -The art of working with a DJ -Hip spots to hang out in the “new” Nashville -The responsibility of successful people to “pay it forward” -Finding your path and owning it -Actions speak louder than words -Embracing and growing with new technology -Getting so good that your heroes become your friends -How Daru became the subject of the documentary “Influential Style” Follow Daru: @darujones www.facebook.com/darujones/ The Rich Redmond Show is about all things music, motivation and success. Candid conversations with musicians, actors, comedians, authors and thought leaders about their lives and the stories that shaped them. Rich Redmond is the longtime drummer with Jason Aldean and many other veteran musicians and artists. Rich is also an actor, speaker, author, producer and educator. Rich has been heard on thousands of songs, over 25 of which have been #1 hits! Rich can also be seen in several films and TV shows and has also written an Amazon Best-Selling book, "CRASH! Course for Success: 5 Ways to Supercharge Your Personal and Professional Life" currently available at: https://www.amazon.com/CRASH-Course-S... Follow Rich: @richredmond www.richredmond.com Jim McCarthy is the quintessential Blue Collar Voice Guy. Honing his craft since 1996 with radio stations in Illinois, South Carolina, Connecticut, New York, Las Vegas and Nashville, Jim has voiced well over 10,000 pieces since and garnered an ear for audio production which he now uses for various podcasts, commercials and promos. Jim is also an accomplished video producer, content creator, writer and overall entrepreneur. Follow Jim: @jimmccarthy www.jimmccarthyvoiceovers.com
This comes to us from my daughter= in-law. i found it interesting and was happy to have been enlightened. We think you will as we.. So here is some Jack White from 2014 his sophmore release.
Host Anne Greenhalgh talks with David Barnes, Associate Professor of History and Sociology of Science and Director of the Health and Societies Program at the University of Pennsylvania,about his research into the history of the Lazaretto quarantine station (1799-1895) on the Delaware River outside Philadelphia—the oldest surviving quarantine station in the Western Hemisphere and the seventh oldest in the world, on Leadership in Action. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Batter up! Take your base with the Third Men Podcast this week as we slide into all things Baseball as they pertain to Jack White. From an early age, Jack and his buddies were captivated by America's pastime, and his love for the sport has evolved over the years into not just a hobby, but a business for Jack. When he's not busy being a meme at a Cubs game, Jack White is investing in the preservation of childhood ball fields, attending World Series games, throwing out pitches, writing walk-on music for players and even licensing his music to Major League Baseball! The Lazaretto tour brought him to as many different stadiums in the USA as was possible, and shortly thereafter Jack went into business alongside MLB pro Ian Kinsler and founder Ben Jenkins in the baseball bat company Warstic. We were fortunate enough to chat with Ben last year, but so much has happened since then that we just had to check back in with Mr. Jenkins to discuss all the awesome new Warstic happenings! So take a swing with us this week as we cover our bases and go for one big grand slam of an episode! Puns! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Robinhood is giving listeners a free stock to build your portfolio. Sign up at http://whatsgood.robinhood.comGet your first Quip toothbrush refill pack free at http://getquip.com/whatsgoodThis week Britt and Andrea are tag-teaming to chat about the whopper of a Nintendo Direct featuring Super Smash Bros. Ultimate for Switch. They also discuss the full lineup for Playstation Classic, microtransactions gone bad in Black Ops 4, and a record setting weekend for Red Dead Redemption 2. Plus in hands-on they take your RDR2 questions and Britt chats about her time in Call of Duty Blackout. Support What’s Good Games on Patreon! Gain access to behind-the-scenes content, exclusive videos, extra podcast segments and more. http://www.patreon.com/whatsgoodgames Segment One: News :42 Welcome to the show! 10:00 SMASH NEWS! 27:42 Red Dead Redemption is making money, you guys 34:25 BLOPS 4 and silly microtransactions 49:56 PS1 Classic games revealed 53:26 The Nintendo Switch is selling! WHO KNEW?! Segment Two: Hands-On 59:24 Welcome back! 1:03:52 More RDR thoughts and YOUR questions! 1:23:48 Blackout impressions 1:27:45 Lazaretto impressions Discuss the podcast on our social channels! http://www.facebook.com/whatsgoodgames http://www.twitter.com/whatsgood_games http://www.youtube.com/whatsgoodgames Join the community page! https://www.facebook.com/groups/whatsgoodgames/ *** Brittney http://twitter.com/blondenerd http://facebook.com/blondenerd http://youtube.com/blondenerd Andrea http://twitter.com/andrearene http://www.instagram.com/andrearene_/ Steimer http://twitter.com/steimer https://www.instagram.com/ksteimer/
It’s five on the live, and we’ll be taking time to review our favorite Jack White live cuts featuring guest performers! In this all-new installment of our continuing series, your humble co-hosts have picked through decades of concerts both large and small to find our five favorite performances from Jack White with (or as) a special guest musician! Fortunately for us there's a lot of shows to choose from, with guests ranging from rock legends, to key influences, to contemporaries and beyond. Of course the grandaddy of them all occurred in 2015 when the Lazaretto touring band were joined on stage by the last member of Led Zeppelin Jack had still yet to play with: Mr. Robert Plant. That tour united many a musician in song, including Q Tip for an electric performance at Madison Square Garden, as well as both Beck and Sean Ono Lennon! From there we journey to Lake Wobegon for the one and only live performance by both Jack White and Margo Price, before heading back to Third Man in Nashville to witness an incredible moment on stage with Pearl Jam. All this, plus the return of Third People Kali Durga and Yvette Wilkins to hear a first-hand account of the Boarding House reach tour kick-off at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week’s guest is Clay Mcleod Chapman, the writer of Lazaretto from BOOM! Studios. This was hands down, one of the creepiest books I’ve read in the past year. It’s the kind of comic that will have you washing your hands afterward and for good reason. The series ran for five issues and you may be able to find them at your local comic shop. The trade paperback isn’t out for a bit, but you can definitely pick up digital copies of the single issues on ComiXology or Kindle. This one comes highly recommended, folks. Clay can be found online at his official website, ClayMcLeodChapman.com. In other news, early Funny Book Splatter guest, John Lees is back on Kickstarter with the first volume of Sink from ComixTribe. This collects the first five issues of the series including some extra material. It’s available in both a softcover and limited edition hardcover. I backed this thing as soon as I saw it was launched and I strongly urge you to do the same. ComixTribe always overdelivers on their Kickstarters and they have some special giveaways planned for this very short campaign. CONTACT: Email | Twitter SUBSCRIBE: RSS | iTunes | Google Play | Stitcher Music by Eric Matyas (www.soundimage.org)
It was a slow week in comics but that didn't stop Tyler and JP from putting out a solid bm. They also put out this episode. They talk about the podcast Doodie Calls, The Bearenstain Bears phenomenon, as well as something called a poop knife. I don't know either but its all here and waiting to pleasure your earholes. Comics covered Lazaretto #5 Realm #5 Motherlands #1 Theme song "Sing Praise" by The Flying Eyes comics, comic books, bearenstain bears, poop knife, flying eyes, smash n' grab comics, smash n' grab, lazaretto, motherlands, podcast, Realm www.smashngrabcomics.com
The Comics Agenda Episode 62: Rise from the Ashes Anelise and Greg talk about the Antman and Wasp trailer that came out this week. Then we get into our weekly pile of comics including the finale of Phoenix Resurrection. Then we wrap it up with some talk about The Gifted. Books this week included Realm #5, Lazaretto #4, Star Wars Force of Destiny: Rose & Paige, Silencer #1, Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Force #1, Motherlands #1, Phoenix Resurrection #5, and Saucer State TPB. If you have questions email us. And make sure that you hit your local shop. Listen, Enjoy and Subscribe. The Comics Agenda is hosted by Anelise (Twitter@Anelise.Farris ) and Greg (Twitter@Comicsportsgeek). We discuss several new comic book releases each week, in addition to breaking news, movies, and tv. You can reach us on Twitter @TheComicsAgenda or email us at TheComicsAgenda@gmail.com
This week we’re joined by Jim Hanke from Vinyl Emergency to explore all of the strange, cool and unusual designs found in classic and current albums. We cover everything from edible EPs to covers featuring pictures of pants with fully working zippers (even if it did sort of ruin the physical album inside.) Jim brings his fantastic wealth of information, while Michael and Richard team up with stuff they found on Wikipedia. Who will win? Only Jeff knows, but honestly, the answer is pretty obvious. Make sure you follow Vinyl Emergency on Twitter and Facebook along with checking out his show, where he has interviewed big shots including Matthew Sweet and Roseanne Cash. SHOW NOTES 8:41 – “Gummy Song Skull EP” by the Flaming Lips (Jim’s Choice) 15:30 – “Sticky Fingers” by the Rolling Stones (Richard and Michael’s Choice) 22:26 – “Vitalogy” by Pearl Jam (Joint Choice) 38:30 – “In Through the Out Door” by Led Zeppelin (Richard and Michael’s Choice) 43:23 – “Lazaretto” by Jack White (Joint Choice) 55:15 – “Friday the 13th (Original Motion Picture Score)” by Harry Manfredini (Jim’s Choice) 1:00:01 – “Yesterday and Today” by the Beatles (Jeff’s “Borglum’s Bag” Choice)
In this episode, Jeff apologizes, Braden doubles down, and Roman somethings and Trevor shows up! Then they all chat about Lazaretto #3, Captain America #695, Superman #34, Peter Parker Spectacular Spider-Man #6, Batman #34 and Batman: White Knight #2. SPOILERS! There are a lot of them. So read these books before you listen to this podcast. Subscribe to us on iTunes or wherever you like to get your podcasts. Call in with your questions at 1-619-663-7336. Or email them to us info at our website address.
What’s New? Riverdale a ratings hit Deadpool 2 and Dark Phoenix wrap shooting Black Panther trailer New Mutants trailer Scarred Lands back in Print Bing Con 10/28 Comics: Lazaretto #1 Falcon #1 ASM: Renew Your Vows #9 Boob Tube: Blade Runner 2049 Close Encounters of the Third Kind The Flash Arrow Thanks for listening! Check out www.secretidentitypodcast.com for all things Secret Identity.
In this episode, Jeff, Braden and Django welcome talk about Michael Cray #1, Family Trade #1, Lazaretto #2, Mister Miracle #2, Dark Nights Metal #3, God Complex #1, Action Comics #989 (The Oz Effect part 3) and Braden hosts a fireside chat he likes to call "Marvel Buckshot Hour" or something like that. SPOILERS! There are a lot of them. So read these books before you listen to this podcast. Subscribe to us on iTunes or wherever you like to get your podcasts. Call in with your questions at 1-619-663-7336. Or email them to us info at our website address.
Hey Handsomites! Eric and Robbie discuss Nameless this week! They talk about cosmic horror, utilizing comics' uniqueness, and the grotesqueness of Burnham's art! They also review Runaways #1 and Dark Ark #1! Weekly Floppies Runaways #1 Redlands #2 Dark Ark #1 Lazaretto #1 Scales & Scoundrels #1 Nerd Boy Book Club Nameless by Morrison, Burnham, […] The post 196 – Nameless by Morrison, Burnham, & Fairbairn appeared first on Handsome Boys Comics Hour.
Hey Handsomites! Eric and Robbie discuss Nameless this week! They talk about cosmic horror, utilizing comics’ uniqueness, and the grotesqueness of Burnham’s art! They also review Runaways #1 and Dark Ark #1! Weekly Floppies Runaways #1 Redlands #2 Dark Ark #1 Lazaretto #1 Scales & Scoundrels #1 Nerd Boy Book Club Nameless by Morrison, Burnham, […] The post 196 – Nameless by Morrison, Burnham, & Fairbairn appeared first on Handsome Boys Comics Hour.
Top 10 August sales, Generations: Iron Man and Ironheart, Venomverse 1, Venomverse: War Stories 1, Journey to Star Wars: The Last Jedi - Captain Phasma 1, Star Wars Adventures 1, Dastardly & Muttley 1, Scales and Scoundrels 1, Kingsman: Red Diamond 1, Lazaretto 1, Made Men 1, remembering Len Wein, IT movie review, Rise of the Super-Sons, Harley Quinn, Star Wars IX director, Hawk and Dove casting, Marvel teen line, Joss Whedon Details: Generations: Iron Man and Ironheart by Brian Michael Bendis, Marco Rudy, Szymon Kudranski, Nico Leon, Will Sliney; Venomverse 1 by Cullen Bunn, Iban Coello, Matt Yackey; Venomverse: War Stories 1 by Cullen Bunn, Annapaolo Martello, Nnedi Okorafor, J Tana Ford, Declan Shalvey, Mags Visaggio, Alex Arizmendi, Aaron Covington, Khary Randolph; Journey to Star Wars: The Last Jedi - Captain Phasma 1 by Kelly Thompson, Marco Checchetto, Andres Mossa; Star Wars Adventures 1 by Cavan Scott, Derek Charm, Jon Sommariva, Sean Parsons, Dastardly & Muttley 1 by Garth Ennis, Alain Mauricet, John Kalisz; Scales and Scoundrels 1 by Sebastian Girner, Galaad; Kingsman: Red Diamond 1 by Rob Williams, Simon Fraser; Lazaretto 1 by Clay Chapman, Jey Levang, Igcio Valicenti; Made Men 1 by Paul Tobin, Arjuna Susini, Gonzalo Duerte Comics Countdown 06 September 2017: Darth Vader 5 by Charles Soule, Giuseppe Camuncoli, Cam Smith, David Curiel Hawkeye 10 by Kelly Thompson, Leonardo Romero, Jordie Bellaire Scales and Scoundrels 1 by Sebastian Girner, Galaad Shade the Changing Girl 12 by Cecil Castellucci, Marley Zarcone, Ande Parks, Becky Cloonan, Matt Taylor Motor Crush 6 by Brenden Fletcher, Cameron Stewart, Babs Tarr, Heather Danforth Deathstroke 23 by Christopher Priest, Diogenes Neves, Jason Paz, Jeromy Cox Batman 30 by Tom King, Clay Mann, Seth Mann, Jordie Bellaire Woods 35 by James Tynion IV, Michael Dialynas Astro City 47 by Kurt Busiek, Mike Norton, Pete Pantazis Seven to Eternity 9 by Rick Remender, James Harren, Matt Hollingsworth
In which 4 boys talk about Scales and Scoundrels #1, Doom Patrol #8, Generations: Iron Man and Iron Heart #1 and Lazaretto #1. Django also does a rapid-fire set of reviews including Dastardly + Muttly #1, Kingsman: the Red Diamond #1, Venomverse #1 and Walking Dead #171.SPOILERS! There are a lot of them. So read these books before you listen to this podcast.Subscribe to us on iTunes or wherever you like to get your podcasts.Call in with your questions at 1-619-663-7336. Or email them to us info at our website address.
It was a great week for dogs in comics this week. Especially teleporting giant dogs. And dogs who can fuse bodies with humans. Also, a great week for having sex with beautiful cat men! Overall it was a very good week in comics, so to celebrate we recorded a slightly above average episode of Serious Issues! We also recorded a 70 minute Q&A episode today too! You can hear it by signing up to our Patreon page at http://patreon.com/seriousissuespodcast and getting access to our secret bonus Patreon episode feed! SUPPORT US ON PATREONFOLLOW US ON FACEBOOKJOIN THE SERIOUS ISSUES FACEBOOK GROUPFOLLOW US ON TWITTERTWITTER: LEVINS / SIOBHANINSTAGRAM: LEVINS / SIOBHAN Comics reviewed in this episode: First Things First (4:50) Venomverse #1 Venomverse: War Stories #1 Generations: Iron #1 Star Wars Captain Phasma #1 Star Wars Adventures #1 Dastardly & Muttley #1 Bombshells United #1 Scales & Scoundrels #1 Kingsman The Red Diamond #1 Lazaretto #1 Made Men #1 Yoga Hosers #1 Fruit Ninja #1 Image (42:45) Motor Crush #6 Elsewhere #2 The Wicked & The Divine #31 The Walking Dead #171 DC (50:33) Batman #30 Superman #30 Nightwing #28 Deathstroke #23 Injustice 2 #9 Shade The Changing Girl #12 Doom Patrol #8 Astro City #47 Savage Things #7 Marvel (1:04:38) Black Bolt #5 Inhumans Once and Future Kings #2 Royals #7 All New Guardians of the Galaxy #9 Jessica Jones #12 Astonishing X-Men #3 Generation X #6 Daredevil #26 Darth Vader #5 Hawkeye #10 Other Publishers (1:23:05) Cloudia & Rex #3 Ab Irato #5 Jazz Maynard #4 Swordquest #3 World Reader #6 Animosity The Rise #3 Judge Dredd The Blessed Earth #5 Usagi Yojimbo #161 Beautiful Canvas #3 Sherlock The Great Game #2 Which comics to pick up this week (1:41:40) – Serious Issues is a weekly comic book review podcast, hosted by Andrew Levins and Siobhan Coombs at Kings Comics in Sydney. Get in touch with us to ask us a question or tell us to start reading something we’re missing out on. Email us at seriousissues@kingscomics.com or find us at facebook.com/seriousissuespodcast. If you like what you hear, please leave us a nice review on iTunes! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
- Generations-The Iron #1. Brian Michael Bendis y Marco Rudy, Szymon Kudranski, Nico Leon. (Marvel). - Journey to Star Wars: The Last Jedi - Star Wars Captain Phasma #1. Kelly Thompson y Marco Checchetto. (Marvel). - Kingsman: The Red Diamond #1 (de 6). Rob Williams y Simon Fraser. (Image). - Lazaretto #1. Clay McLeod Chapman y Jey Levang. (Boom!). - Made Men #1. Paul Tobin y Arjuana Susini. (Oni Press). - Scales and Scoundrels #1. Sebastian Girner y Galaad. (Image). Inauguramos una pequeña sección todavía sin nombre (las sugerencias serán bienvenidas) en la que esquemáticamente contamos qué tebeos de la semana que no son novedades hemos leído o tenemos intención de leer. Así podréis seguirnos el rastro e ir viendo qué colecciones de las nuevas se han mantenido entre nuestras lecturas y qué colecciones, en general, seguimos.
- Generations-The Iron #1. Brian Michael Bendis y Marco Rudy, Szymon Kudranski, Nico Leon. (Marvel). - Journey to Star Wars: The Last Jedi - Star Wars Captain Phasma #1. Kelly Thompson y Marco Checchetto. (Marvel). - Kingsman: The Red Diamond #1 (de 6). Rob Williams y Simon Fraser. (Image). - Lazaretto #1. Clay McLeod Chapman y Jey Levang. (Boom!). - Made Men #1. Paul Tobin y Arjuana Susini. (Oni Press). - Scales and Scoundrels #1. Sebastian Girner y Galaad. (Image). Inauguramos una pequeña sección todavía sin nombre (las sugerencias serán bienvenidas) en la que esquemáticamente contamos qué tebeos de la semana que no son novedades hemos leído o tenemos intención de leer. Así podréis seguirnos el rastro e ir viendo qué colecciones de las nuevas se han mantenido entre nuestras lecturas y qué colecciones, en general, seguimos.
An interview with Paul Osier, developer of the game "Lazeretto".
A hundred years before Ellis Island became a processing center for immigrants wishing to enter the United States, Philadelphia had the Lazaretto, a quarantine hospital where every ship entering the harbor from June to September had to stop while those aboard were checked for signs of infectious disease. In a city already known for its diversity by the mid-nineteenth century, the Lazaretto represented both openness to and fear of the outsider. This deep ambivalence, to change and to the other, forms the heart of Lazaretto (Harper, 2016), the sparkling new novel by Diane McKinney-Whetstone, who already has five acclaimed works of fiction to her credit. The US Civil War has just ended. In the home of a well-respected midwife, a white attorney has brought his young black servant, Meda, to abort the child he has fathered on her. But the pregnancy is too far along for such a solution, and the child arrives that very night. The father takes the child, ordering the midwife to tell his servant that her daughter is dead. Distraught, Meda takes temporary refuge at a nearby orphanage as soon as she has recovered from childbirth. There she acts as a wet nurse to two newborn boys, whom she christens Bram and Lincoln after her hero, President Abraham Lincoln assassinated on the same night as her own baby died. When she returns to her employers home, the boys come with her for part of every week. Meda raises them as brothers. As the boys grow older, they move back and forth among the affluent white community, the orphanage, and Medas mostly warm and welcoming friends and family, until a series of drastic events brings them to the Lazaretto. There old questions at last find answers. C. P. Lesley is the author of six novels, including Legends of the Five Directions (The Golden Lynx, The Winged Horse, and The Swan Princess), a historical fiction series set in 1530s Russia, during the childhood of Ivan the Terrible. Find out more about her at http://www.cplesley.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A hundred years before Ellis Island became a processing center for immigrants wishing to enter the United States, Philadelphia had the Lazaretto, a quarantine hospital where every ship entering the harbor from June to September had to stop while those aboard were checked for signs of infectious disease. In a city already known for its diversity by the mid-nineteenth century, the Lazaretto represented both openness to and fear of the outsider. This deep ambivalence, to change and to the other, forms the heart of Lazaretto (Harper, 2016), the sparkling new novel by Diane McKinney-Whetstone, who already has five acclaimed works of fiction to her credit. The US Civil War has just ended. In the home of a well-respected midwife, a white attorney has brought his young black servant, Meda, to abort the child he has fathered on her. But the pregnancy is too far along for such a solution, and the child arrives that very night. The father takes the child, ordering the midwife to tell his servant that her daughter is dead. Distraught, Meda takes temporary refuge at a nearby orphanage as soon as she has recovered from childbirth. There she acts as a wet nurse to two newborn boys, whom she christens Bram and Lincoln after her hero, President Abraham Lincoln assassinated on the same night as her own baby died. When she returns to her employers home, the boys come with her for part of every week. Meda raises them as brothers. As the boys grow older, they move back and forth among the affluent white community, the orphanage, and Medas mostly warm and welcoming friends and family, until a series of drastic events brings them to the Lazaretto. There old questions at last find answers. C. P. Lesley is the author of six novels, including Legends of the Five Directions (The Golden Lynx, The Winged Horse, and The Swan Princess), a historical fiction series set in 1530s Russia, during the childhood of Ivan the Terrible. Find out more about her at http://www.cplesley.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A hundred years before Ellis Island became a processing center for immigrants wishing to enter the United States, Philadelphia had the Lazaretto, a quarantine hospital where every ship entering the harbor from June to September had to stop while those aboard were checked for signs of infectious disease. In a city already known for its diversity by the mid-nineteenth century, the Lazaretto represented both openness to and fear of the outsider. This deep ambivalence, to change and to the other, forms the heart of Lazaretto (Harper, 2016), the sparkling new novel by Diane McKinney-Whetstone, who already has five acclaimed works of fiction to her credit. The US Civil War has just ended. In the home of a well-respected midwife, a white attorney has brought his young black servant, Meda, to abort the child he has fathered on her. But the pregnancy is too far along for such a solution, and the child arrives that very night. The father takes the child, ordering the midwife to tell his servant that her daughter is dead. Distraught, Meda takes temporary refuge at a nearby orphanage as soon as she has recovered from childbirth. There she acts as a wet nurse to two newborn boys, whom she christens Bram and Lincoln after her hero, President Abraham Lincoln assassinated on the same night as her own baby died. When she returns to her employers home, the boys come with her for part of every week. Meda raises them as brothers. As the boys grow older, they move back and forth among the affluent white community, the orphanage, and Medas mostly warm and welcoming friends and family, until a series of drastic events brings them to the Lazaretto. There old questions at last find answers. C. P. Lesley is the author of six novels, including Legends of the Five Directions (The Golden Lynx, The Winged Horse, and The Swan Princess), a historical fiction series set in 1530s Russia, during the childhood of Ivan the Terrible. Find out more about her at http://www.cplesley.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Isolated on an island where two rivers meet, the Lazaretto quarantine hospital is the first stop for immigrants who wish to begin new lives in Philadelphia. The Lazaretto’s black live-in staff forge a strong social community, and when one of them receives permission to get married on the island the mood is one of celebration, particularly since the white staff—save the opium-addicted doctor—are given leave for the weekend. On the eve of the ceremony, a gunshot rings out across the river. A white man has fired at a boat carrying the couple’s friends and family to the island, and the captain is injured. His life lies in the hands of Sylvia, the Lazaretto’s head nurse, who is shocked to realize she knows the patient. Intertwined with the drama unfolding at the Lazaretto are the fates of orphan brothers. When one brother commits a crime to protect the other, he imperils both of their lives—and the consequences ultimately deliver both of them to the Lazaretto. In this masterful work of historical fiction, Diane McKinney-Whetstone seamlessly transports us to Philadelphia in the aftermath of the Civil War and Lincoln’s assassination, beautifully evoking powerful stories of love, friendship and humanity amid the vibrant black community that flourished amid the troubled times. Diane McKinney-Whetstone is the author of five acclaimed novels and the recipient of numerous awards, including the American Library Association's Black Caucus Literary Award for Fiction, which she won twice. She teaches fiction writing at the University of Pennsylvania and lives in Philadelphia with her husband, Greg.
The Velvet Underground, Stereolab, Jack White, Keith Richards, Drenge, Ben Harper, The Strokes, Superchunk, ZZ Top e várias outras bandas em nossa Mixtape 38, faça o download agora. (clique com o botão direito e selecione salvar). Para ouvir outras músicas do artista clique nos links. 01 – Guess I’m Falling In Love – The Velvet Underground 02 – We Can Do What We Want – Drenge 03 – PDA – Interpol 04 – Between The Eyes – Love Battery 05 – French Disko – Stereolab 06 – Lazaretto – Jack White 07 – Black Rain – Ben Harper 08 – What’d I Say – Ray Charles 09 – Trouble – Keith Richards 10 – La Grange – ZZ Top 11 – The House Is Rockin’ – Stevie Ray Vaughan 12 – Nancy Boy – Placebo 13 – What Ever Happened? – The Strokes 14 – 40 oz On Repeat – FIDLAR 15 – City – Spring King 16 – Milkman – Bully 17 – Slack Motherfucker – Superchunk A próxima mixtape vai pro ar no dia 29/02/2016.
This week we talk about music, we learn how obsessed with Underoath Cody is and Edi sees his number one band Smash Mouth. Links from this episode: Deathcore - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deathcore Bell tower ringtone on iPhones - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeeB9BWnUgQ Thy Art Is Murder - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thy_Art_Is_Murder Reign of Darkness - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47Plg93oJ1M Extreme Thing 2014 lineup - http://www.punksinvegas.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/extreme-thing-2014.jpg Chimaira - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimaira Warped Tour - http://vanswarpedtour.com/ Oceano - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oceano_%28band%29 District of Misery - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGS8vvQKg14 Blink 182 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blink-182 Girl at the Rock Show - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7hhDINyBP0 Architects: Lost Forever // Lost Together - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_Forever_//_Lost_Together Architects: Naysayer - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MHTy_dcSKE La Dispute: Rooms of the House - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rooms_of_the_House La Dispute: Stay Happy There - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxVI0heXYMo Foster the People: Supermodel - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermodel_(album) Foster the People: A Beginner's Guide to Destroying the Moon - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TSOv2PtPyHg Foster the People: Torches - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torches_(album) Jack White - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_White Jack White: Lazaretto - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lazaretto_(album) Lazaretto vinyl - http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/6077577/jack-white-lazaretto-vinyl-special-features-third-man-video Childish Gambino - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Glover Lorde - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorde Underoath: Disambiguation Remixes - http://underoath.merchline.com/collections/vinyl/products/disambiguation-remixes-clear-vinyl Underoath: Lost in the Sound of Separation Deluxe Vinyl Box Set - http://underoath.merchline.com/collections/vinyl/products/underoath-lost-in-the-sound-of-separation-deluxe-vinyl-box-set Underoath: Tired Violence - http://tiredviolence.merchline.com/ TIred Violence Blu Ray - http://tiredviolence.merchline.com/products/tired-violence-film-bundle-2 Underoath posters - http://underoath.merchline.com/collections/posters Extreme Thing 2012 lineup - http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-quwCTdY_rrg/T2uU2QdSuHI/AAAAAAAAAKQ/crlI3inwm7k/s640/extreme.jpg Riot Fest 2013 lineup - http://i.huffpost.com/gen/1141200/thumbs/o-RIOTFEST-2013-LINEUP-900.jpg?6 Brand New - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brand_New_%28band%29 Brand New: Seventy Times Seven - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnLJ1iYOZHM Warped Tour 2012 lineup - http://rockandrollreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Vans+Warped+Tour+2012+VWT12_OS.jpeg Balance and Composure - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_and_Composure The Beach Boys - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Beach_Boys Oingo Boingo - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oingo_Boingo Of Mice & Men - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Of_Mice_%26_Men_%28band%29 OF Mice & Men: Restoring Force - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restoring_Force_(album) Four Year Strong: Go Down In History - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hA7OI3jW94s A Day To Remember - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Day_to_Remember A Day To Remember: 2nd Sucks - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6T9olarH-U Smash Mouth - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smash_Mouth Smash Mouth: All Star - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L_jWHffIx5E Mystery Men - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0132347/ Victory Pic! (Spoilers) - http://i.imgur.com/IPfPwaF.png?1
Welcome to Crash Chords: Season 3! We have plenty else in store for you this year, but of course our album reviews continue to be the meat and potatoes. Today's review looks at Jack White, formerly of The White Stripes, and his burgeoning solo work. His latest, Lazaretto, is a medley of ideas inspired by his own writings when he was 19 years old. Join in the analysis! Then, as a taste of what's to come, we feature a special phone interview that Matt had the pleasure of arranging with Mawk (Mark Young) of (hed) p.e. Visit directly at 2:14:54. Continue reading
WM40A Crew kicks back being cool while reviewing the Jack White's knew album "Lazaretto". Topics: Overall view of the album Track by Track Analysis Final Scores Feedback Line: (443)832-3494 Email: podcast@wheresmy40acres.com Guest: Twitter: @WM40A @MsMusicLover @Twanburgandy @SilentXMedia @PhenomBlak Instagram: @PhenomBlak NegroCon Live... The post Jack White “Lazaretto” Review – E.A.R.S. Podcast appeared first on Where's My 40 Acres Podcast - WM40A.
There are no instructions for building the perfect Top 5 Movies of the Year (So Far). You’ve got to do it yourself. At the midway point of the moviegoing year, Josh and Adam try their best to be master list builders. Plus, a review of David Michod's bleak THE ROVER, starring Guy Pearce and Robert Pattinson. This episode is presented by Shutterstock (FILM614). 0:00-1:38 - Billboard / Shutterstock 1:38-18:03 - Top 5: Films of 2014 (So Far) Jack White, "Lazaretto" 19:13-21:07 - Shutterstock 21:07-32:51 - Notes / Polls 32:51-55:16 - Review: "The Rover" Jack White, "That Black Bat Licorice" 56:23-1:02:37 - Donations 1:02:37-1:28:23 - Top 5: Films of 2014 cont. 1:28:23-1:30:51 - Close MUSIC - Jack White UPCOMING - Filmspotting #500 Live - Adam's Roger Ebert class LINKS - Josh on "The Rover" - Tobias on "Only Lovers Left Alive" - Edelstein on "Locke" - Patricia's Channing Tatum Fest - Transformers: The Premake PARTNERS - Backstory Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Matt and Ryan discuss Jack White’s “Lazaretto.” Episode 113: Analog in a Digital World originally appeared on Overthinking It, the site subjecting the popular culture to a level of scrutiny it probably doesn't deserve. [Latest Posts | Podcast (iTunes Link)]
Godzilla, that green, rubbery, nuclear-breathing master of destruction--he's basically like if Gumby kicked ass, right? His origins were a little different. Close to a decade after America dropped the atom bomb, Japanese filmmaker Ishirô Honda sought to show us, in stark black-and-white, what the bomb may have wrought: a physical manifestation of his nation's desperation and anxiety. And, yeah, he was green, rubbery, and breathed nuclear fire. Paul and AJ revisit the 1954 original, looking to discover why it remains so potent despite being so crudely made. Oh, and they talk about the new one for a few minutes too. Plus, Cosmos comes to a close and Jack White gets weird on Lazaretto. Next: There's this movie? That follows this other movie? About this dragon? Something about that.
Lazaretto, his twelfth album, is like gonzo journalism as applied to Rock and Roll, you don't know where it's going but you definitely want to go along for the ride.