Podcasts about not dark yet

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Best podcasts about not dark yet

Latest podcast episodes about not dark yet

Polyphonic Press
Bob Dylan - Time Out of Mind (1997)

Polyphonic Press

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 23:13


"Time Out of Mind" is a haunting and introspective album by Bob Dylan, released in 1997. It's often regarded as a late-career masterpiece, showcasing Dylan's gravelly voice and poetic lyricism. The album delves into themes of love, loss, mortality, and redemption, with songs like "Not Dark Yet" and "Love Sick" capturing a sense of existential reflection and emotional depth. Produced by Daniel Lanois, the album's sound is atmospheric and melancholic, featuring sparse instrumentation that allows Dylan's lyrics and voice to take center stage, creating a raw and intimate listening experience.Listen to the album: ⁠SpotifyApple MusicLinks:Official websiteContactSupport us on PatreonDISCLAIMER: Due to copyright restrictions, we are unable to play pieces of the songs we cover in these episodes. Playing clips of songs are unfortunately prohibitively expensive to obtain the proper licensing. We strongly encourage you to listen to the album along with us on your preferred format to enhance the listening experience. 

Friday I'm in Love
Bob Dylan Time Out Of Mind - a cura di Lorenzo Mei

Friday I'm in Love

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 51:42


Il giornalista Lorenzo Mei parla di Bob Dylan a poche settimane dalla sua presenza al Lucca Summer Festival. Nel 1997, dopo otto anni da ‘Oh Mercy', torna la collaborazione tra Bob Dylan e Daniel Lanois che dà vita al capolavoro del decennio. ‘Fragments', il diciassettesimo volume della Bootleg Series, ruota attorno a questa pietra miliare, dandone una prospettiva completamente diversa rispetto a quella che aveva al tempo della sua pubblicazione. TRACKLIST della serata 01. Political World 02. Everything Is Broken 03. Most Of The Time 04. Shooting Star 05. Man In The Long Black Coat 06. Series Of Dreams 07. Cold Irons Bound 08. Love Sick 09. Standing In The Doorway 10. Not Dark Yet 11. Tryin' To Get To Heaven 12. Red River Shore

CLM Activa Radio
Retrocedemos en el tiempo 18-4-2024 451 bob dylan

CLM Activa Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 59:36


DON'T THINK TWICE , IT'S ALRIGHT (1963) POSITIVELY 4Th STREET (1967) IT AIN'T ME BABE (1964) IF NOT FOR YOU (1970) SUBTERRANEAN HOMESICK BLUES (1965) MAGGIE'S FARM (1965) FOREVER YOUNG (1974) GOTTA SERVE SOMEBODY (1979) ALL ALONG THE WATCHTOWER (1967) TANGLED UP IN BLUE (1975) JUST LIKE A WOMAN (1966) I'LL BE YOUR BABY TONIGHT (1967) NOT DARK YET (1997)

The Shlomo Franklin Show
152. Carolina Run

The Shlomo Franklin Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2024 34:03


We head to Carolina for some swell shows! We do Not Dark Yet by Bob Dylan and a whole lot more. Thanks for listening and have a great week!

bob dylan not dark yet
Slate Culture
Culture Gabfest: Napoleon Attempts to Conquer

Slate Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 57:22


This week, Dana and Julia are joined by Jamelle Bouie, Opinion columnist at The New York Times and co-host of Unclear and Present Danger. The panel begins by diving into Ridley Scott's Napoleon, a visually sumptuous biopic starring Joaquin Phoenix that attempts to chronicle the legendary historical figure's life and reduce him to human size, yet fails to do so within its 2 ½ hour runtime. Then, the three jump into Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, a new eight-part animated Netflix series that offers an alternate version of its protagonist, Scott Pilgrim (who was first depicted in Bryan Lee O'Malley's series of graphic novels then later in Edgar Wright's cult classic film, Scott Pilgrim vs. The World), and reunites much of the movie's brilliant original cast. Finally, they discuss André 3000's New Blue Sun, a transcendent ambient album laced with flute-base soundscapes that on its face seems like a complete departure from the rapper's previous work in Outkast, but actually depicts a piece of him that's been present in his music all along.   In the exclusive Slate Plus segment, the panel takes advantage of Jamelle's baking prowess and discusses best practices and tips in the kitchen, before turning to the eternal, all-important question: When you bake, do you use a measuring scale? And if so, why?    We're also accepting submissions to our yearly call-in show, where Dana, Julia, and Stephen answer questions from Culture Gabfest listeners. Get in touch! Submit a question by calling (260) 337-8260 or emailing us at culturefest@slate.com. Outro music: “By the Riverside” by Lindsey Abraham Endorsements: Jamelle: The 4K restoration of one of his favorite movies, The Fugitive (1993), starring Tommy Lee Jones and Harrison Ford. It's an underrated and beautiful Chicago movie.  Julia: A deep cut from her personal Summer Strut playlist: Bob Dylan's 1997 song “Not Dark Yet,” which appeared on the album Time Out of Mind.  Dana: Inspired by their discussion of André 3000's new album, Dana endorses a different avant-garde flute enthusiast: Eric Dolphy, the American multi-instrumentalist and bandleader. Specifically, his fantastic 1964 jazz album, Out to Lunch.  Podcast production by Cameron Drews. Production assistance by Kat Hong.  If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get an ad-free experience across the network and exclusive content on many shows. You'll also be supporting the work we do here on the Culture Gabfest. Sign up now at Slate.com/cultureplus to help support our work. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Slate Daily Feed
Culture Gabfest: Napoleon Attempts to Conquer

Slate Daily Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 57:22


This week, Dana and Julia are joined by Jamelle Bouie, Opinion columnist at The New York Times and co-host of Unclear and Present Danger. The panel begins by diving into Ridley Scott's Napoleon, a visually sumptuous biopic starring Joaquin Phoenix that attempts to chronicle the legendary historical figure's life and reduce him to human size, yet fails to do so within its 2 ½ hour runtime. Then, the three jump into Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, a new eight-part animated Netflix series that offers an alternate version of its protagonist, Scott Pilgrim (who was first depicted in Bryan Lee O'Malley's series of graphic novels then later in Edgar Wright's cult classic film, Scott Pilgrim vs. The World), and reunites much of the movie's brilliant original cast. Finally, they discuss André 3000's New Blue Sun, a transcendent ambient album laced with flute-base soundscapes that on its face seems like a complete departure from the rapper's previous work in Outkast, but actually depicts a piece of him that's been present in his music all along.   In the exclusive Slate Plus segment, the panel takes advantage of Jamelle's baking prowess and discusses best practices and tips in the kitchen, before turning to the eternal, all-important question: When you bake, do you use a measuring scale? And if so, why?    We're also accepting submissions to our yearly call-in show, where Dana, Julia, and Stephen answer questions from Culture Gabfest listeners. Get in touch! Submit a question by calling (260) 337-8260 or emailing us at culturefest@slate.com. Outro music: “By the Riverside” by Lindsey Abraham Endorsements: Jamelle: The 4K restoration of one of his favorite movies, The Fugitive (1993), starring Tommy Lee Jones and Harrison Ford. It's an underrated and beautiful Chicago movie.  Julia: A deep cut from her personal Summer Strut playlist: Bob Dylan's 1997 song “Not Dark Yet,” which appeared on the album Time Out of Mind.  Dana: Inspired by their discussion of André 3000's new album, Dana endorses a different avant-garde flute enthusiast: Eric Dolphy, the American multi-instrumentalist and bandleader. Specifically, his fantastic 1964 jazz album, Out to Lunch.  Podcast production by Cameron Drews. Production assistance by Kat Hong.  If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get an ad-free experience across the network and exclusive content on many shows. You'll also be supporting the work we do here on the Culture Gabfest. Sign up now at Slate.com/cultureplus to help support our work. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Fire and Water Podcast Network
Pod Dylan #253 - Not Dark Yet

The Fire and Water Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 68:19


Rob welcomes back fellow network all-star Ryan Daly to discuss the various versions of "Not Dark Yet" from 1997's TIME OUT OF MIND. Have a question or comment? E-MAIL: firewaterpodcast@comcast.net Follow POD DYLAN on Twitter: @Pod_Dylan POD DYLAN "Jukebox" T-Shirt now available: https://www.etsy.com/shop/RobKellyCreative You can find POD DYLAN on these platforms: Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/pod-dylan/id1095013228 Amazon Music Spotify Stitcher Complete list of all songs covered so far: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com/podcast/pod-dylan-the-songs Buy this song on Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/time-out-of-mind/190392344 This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER – https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page – https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Support The Fire & Water Podcast Network on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/fwpodcasts Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts Thanks for listening!

Pod Dylan
Pod Dylan #253 - Not Dark Yet

Pod Dylan

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 68:19


Rob welcomes back fellow network all-star Ryan Daly to discuss the various versions of "Not Dark Yet" from 1997's TIME OUT OF MIND. Have a question or comment? E-MAIL: firewaterpodcast@comcast.net Follow POD DYLAN on Twitter: @Pod_Dylan POD DYLAN "Jukebox" T-Shirt now available: https://www.etsy.com/shop/RobKellyCreative You can find POD DYLAN on these platforms: Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/pod-dylan/id1095013228 Amazon Music Spotify Stitcher Complete list of all songs covered so far: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com/podcast/pod-dylan-the-songs Buy this song on Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/time-out-of-mind/190392344 This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER – https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page – https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Support The Fire & Water Podcast Network on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/fwpodcasts Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts Thanks for listening!

Pod Dylan
Pod Dylan #253 – Not Dark Yet

Pod Dylan

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2023 68:19


Rob welcomes back fellow network all-star Ryan Daly to discuss the various versions of "Not Dark Yet" from 1997's TIME OUT OF MIND. Have a question or comment? E-MAIL: firewaterpodcast@comcast.net Follow POD DYLAN on Twitter: @Pod_Dylan POD DYLAN "Jukebox" T-Shirt now available: https://www.etsy.com/shop/RobKellyCreative You can find POD DYLAN on these platforms: Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/pod-dylan/id1095013228 Amazon Music Spotify Stitcher Complete list of all songs covered so far: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com/podcast/pod-dylan-the-songs Buy this song on Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/time-out-of-mind/190392344 This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER – https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page – https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Support The Fire & Water Podcast Network on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/fwpodcasts Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts Thanks for listening!

Shiloh Worship Music
It's Not Dark Yet, But The Sun Is Going Down

Shiloh Worship Music

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 5:25


It's Not Dark Yet, But The Sun Is Going Down Time Like A Bullet Train Traveling Down The Line In Your Hand The Measurement Of Time In Your Hand The Measurement Of My Time When I Lay My Head Down I'll Be Thinking Of You Visions In The Dark Of Night Angels Clothed In Light Singing Everything's Gonna Be All Right 2X You Will Carry Me On The Wings Of Eternity Songs In The Night Beacons Of Light Waiting To Be Free 2X Bridge Time Is Slipping Away The Dawn Of Eternal Day Dawn Of Eternal Day 2x Moon Rise With The Eveningtide Silhouetting Trees Song Of The Nightingale Singing Praise To Thee Through This Darkness Now, Lord, I See

lord going down not dark yet
OHNE DEN HYPE – Interviews mit Kreativen
106. With Anthony Burrill about his work on Bob Dylan's Not Dark Yet

OHNE DEN HYPE – Interviews mit Kreativen

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2023 25:25


Last time I spoke to Anthony Burrill was back in August but in the meantime he's been working on, among other things, a project that I was really excited about when I saw it come out. And that's his work on Bob Dylan's new video for the track Not Dark Yet. To sum it up, it's Bob Dylan at his best, Magnum photography and Anthony's artwork – so, I was definitely not disappointed.(Photo by Dunja Opalko)

bob dylan magnum den podcast burrill not dark yet anthony burrill
The Seen and the Unseen - hosted by Amit Varma
Ep 314: The Life and Times of Jerry Pinto

The Seen and the Unseen - hosted by Amit Varma

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2023 484:32


Poet, novelist, translator, journalist, crime fiction writer, children's book author, teacher, math tutor: now here is a man who contains multitudes. Jerry Pinto joins Amit Varma in episode 314 of The Seen and the Unseen to talk about his life and learnings. (FOR FULL LINKED SHOW NOTES, GO TO SEENUNSEEN.IN.) Also check out: 1. Jerry Pinto on Instagram, Amazon and his own website. 2. Em and the Big Hoom -- Jerry Pinto. 3. The Education of Yuri -- Jerry Pinto. 4. Murder in Mahim -- Jerry Pinto. 5. A Book of Light -- Edited by Jerry Pinto. 6. Baluta -- Daya Pawar (translated by Jerry Pinto). 7. I Have Not Seen Mandu -- Swadesh Deepak (translated by Jerry Pinto). 8. Cobalt Blue -- Sachin Kundalkar (translated by Jerry Pinto). 9. The Life and Times of Shanta Gokhale -- Episode 311 of The Seen and the Unseen. 10. ‘Sometimes I feel I have to be completely invisible as a poet' -- Jerry Pinto's interview of Adil Jussawalla. 11. A Godless Congregation — Amit Varma. 12. The Rooted Cosmopolitanism of Sugata Srinivasaraju — Episode 277 of The Seen and the Unseen. 13. The Big Questions — Steven E Landsburg. 14. Unlikely is Inevitable — Amit Varma. 15. The Law of Truly Large Numbers. 16. The Gentle Wisdom of Pratap Bhanu Mehta — Episode 300 of The Seen and the Unseen. 17. Young India — Episode 83 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Snigdha Poonam). 18. Dreamers — Snigdha Poonam. 19. The Loneliness of the Indian Man — Episode 303 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Nikhil Taneja). 20. The History Boys -- Alan Bennett. 21. The Connell Guide to How to Write Well -- Tim de Lisle. 22. Thinking Better: The Art of the Shortcut -- Marcus Du Sautoy. 23. Dead Poet's Society -- Peter Weir. 24. A Mathematician's Apology -- GH Hardy. 25. The Man Who Knew Infinity -- Robert Kanigel. 26. David Berlinski and Martin Gardner on Amazon, and Mukul Sharma on Wikipedia.. 27. Range Rover -- The archives of Amit Varma's column on poker for The Economic Times. 28. Luck is All Around -- Amit Varma. 29. Stoicism on Wikipedia, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and Britannica. 30. House of the Dead —  Fyodor Dostoevsky. 31. Black Beauty -- Anna Sewell. 32. Lady Chatterley's Lover -- DH Lawrence. 33. Mr Norris Changes Trains -- Chistopher Isherwood. 34. Sigrid Undset on Amazon and Wikipedia. 35. Some Prefer Nettles -- Junichiro Tanizaki. 36. Things Fall Apart — Chinua Achebe. 37. Jane Austen and Thomas Hardy on Amazon. 38. Orientalism -- Edward Said. 39. Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Kurt Vonnegut on Amazon. 40. Johnny Got His Gun -- Dalton Trumbo. 41. Selected Poems -- Kamala Das. 42. Collected Poems -- Kamala Das. 43. In Which Annie Gives It Those Ones — Pradip Krishen. 44. Dance Dance For the Halva Waala — Episode 294 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Jai Arjun Singh and Subrat Mohanty). 45. Tosca -- Giacomo Puccini. 46. Civilisation by Kenneth Clark on YouTube and Wikipedia. 47. Archives of The World This Week. 48. Dardi Rab Rab Kardi -- Daler Mehndi. 49. Is Old Music Killing New Music? — Ted Gioia. 50. Mother India (Mehboob Khan) and Mughal-E-Azam (K Asif). 51. A Meditation on Form — Amit Varma. 52. Sara Rai Inhales Literature — Episode 255 of The Seen and the Unseen. 53. Collected Poems — Mark Strand. 54. Forgive Me, Mother -- Eunice de Souza. 55. Porphyria's Lover -- Robert Browning. 56. Island -- Nissim Ezekiel. 57. Paper Menagerie — Ken Liu. 58. Jhumpa Lahiri on Writing, Translation, and Crossing Between Cultures — Episode 17 of Conversations With Tyler. 59. The Notebook Trilogy — Agota Kristof. 60. Amitava Kumar Finds the Breath of Life — Episode 265 of The Seen and the Unseen. 61. The Blue Book: A Writer's Journal — Amitava Kumar. 62. Nissim Ezekiel on Amazon, Wikipedia and All Poetry. 63. Adil Jussawalla on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poetry International. 64. Eunice de Souza on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poetry International. 65. Dom Moraes on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poem Hunter. 66. WH Auden and Stephen Spender on Amazon. 67. Pilloo Pochkhanawala on Wikipedia and JNAF. 68. Arvind Krishna Mehrotra on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poetry Foundation. 69. Amar Akbar Anthony -- Manmohan Desai. 67. Ranjit Hoskote on Amazon, Instagram, Twitter, Wikipedia and Poetry International. 71. Arundhathi Subramaniam on Amazon, Instagram, Wikipedia, Poetry International and her own website. 72. The Red Wheelbarrow -- William Carlos Williams. 73. Mary Oliver's analysis of The Red Wheelbarrow. 74. A Poetry Handbook — Mary Oliver. 75. The War Against Cliche -- Martin Amis. 76. Seamus Heaney on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poetry Foundation. 77. The world behind 'Em and the Big Hoom' -- Jerry Pinto interviewed by Swetha Amit. 78. Jerry Pinto interviewed for the New York Times by Max Bearak. 79. Salman Rushdie, Amitav Ghosh and GV Desani on Amazon. 80. Episodes of The Seen and the Unseen on the creator ecosystem with Roshan Abbas, Varun Duggirala, Neelesh Misra, Snehal Pradhan, Chuck Gopal, Nishant Jain, Deepak Shenoy and Abhijit Bhaduri. 81. Graham Greene, W Somerset Maugham and Aldous Huxley on Amazon. 82. Surviving Men -- Shobhaa De. 83. Surviving Men -- Jerry Pinto. 84. The Essays of GK Chesterton. 85. The Life and Times of Nilanjana Roy — Episode 284 of The Seen and the Unseen. 86. City Improbable: Writings on Delhi -- Edited by Khushwant Singh. 87. Bombay, Meri Jaan -- Edited by Jerry Pinto and Naresh Fernandes. 88. The Life and Times of Urvashi Butalia — Episode 287 of The Seen and the Unseen. 89. Films, Feminism, Paromita — Episode 155 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Paromita Vohra). 90. Wanting -- Luke Burgis. 91. Kalpish Ratna and Sjowall & Wahloo on Amazon. 92. Memories and Things — Episode 195 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Aanchal Malhotra). 93. Ashad ka Ek Din -- Mohan Rakesh. 94. Anna Karenina -- Leo Tolstoy (translated by Constance Garnett). 95. Gordon Lish: ‘Had I not revised Carver, would he be paid the attention given him? Baloney!' -- Christian Lorentzen.. 96. Sooraj Barjatya and Yash Chopra. 97. The Life and Times of Mrinal Pande — Episode 263 of The Seen and the Unseen. 98. Don't think too much of yourself. You're an accident — Amit Varma. 99. Phineas Gage. 100. Georges Simenon on Amazon and Wikipedia.. 101. The Interpreter -- Amit Varma on Michael Gazzaniga's iconic neuroscience experiment. 102. The Life and Times of Abhinandan Sekhri — Episode 254 of The Seen and the Unseen.. 103. Madame Bovary -- Gustave Flaubert. 104. Self-Portrait — AK Ramanujan. 105. Ivan Turgenev, Ryu Murakami and Patricia Highsmith on Amazon. 106. A Clockwork Orange -- Anthony Burgess. 107. On Exactitude in Science — Jorge Luis Borges. 110. Playwright at the Centre: Marathi Drama from 1843 to the Present — Shanta Gokhale. 111. Kubla Khan -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge. 112. Girish Shahane, Naresh Fernandes, Suketu Mehta, David Godwin and Kiran Desai. 113. The Count of Monte Cristo -- Alexandre Dumas. 114. Pedro Almodóvar and Yasujirō Ozu. 115. The Art of Translation — Episode 168 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Arunava Sinha). 116. The Lives of the Poets -- Samuel Johnson. 117. Lives of the Women -- Various authors, edited by Jerry Pinto. 118. Lessons from an Ankhon Dekhi Prime Minister — Amit Varma. 119. On Bullshit — Harry Frankfurt. 120. The Facts Do Not Matter — Amit Varma. 121. Beware of the Useful Idiots — Amit Varma. 122. Modi's Lost Opportunity — Episode 119 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Salman Soz). 123. Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala. 124. The Importance of Data Journalism — Episode 196 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Rukmini S). 125. Rukmini Sees India's Multitudes — Episode 261 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Rukmini S). 126. Pramit Bhattacharya Believes in Just One Ism — Episode 256 of The Seen and the Unseen. 127. Listen, The Internet Has SPACE -- Amit Varma.. 128. Fixing Indian Education — Episode 185 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Karthik Muralidharan). 129. The Reflections of Samarth Bansal — Episode 299 of The Seen and the Unseen. 130. The Saturdays -- Elizabeth Enwright. 131. Summer of My German Soldier -- Bette Greene. 132. I am David -- Anne Holm. 133. Tove Jannson and Beatrix Potter on Amazon. 134. The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings -- JRR Tolkien. 135. Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness -- William Styron. 136. An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness -- Kay Redfield Jamison. 137. Searching for Swadesh -- Nirupama Dutt.. 138. Parsai Rachanawali -- Harishankar Parsai. 139. Not Dark Yet (official) (newly released outtake) -- Bob Dylan.. 140. How This Nobel Has Redefined Literature -- Amit Varma on Dylan winning the Nobel Prize.. 141. The New World Upon Us — Amit Varma. 142. PG Wodehouse on Amazon and Wikipedia. 143. I Heard the Owl Call My Name -- Margaret Craven. 144. 84, Charing Cross Road -- Helen Hanff. 145. Great Expectations, Little Dorrit and Bleak House -- Charles Dickens. 146. Middlemarch -- George Eliot. 147. The Pillow Book -- Sei Shonagon. 148. The Diary of Lady Murasaki -- Murasaki Shikibu. 149. My Experiments With Truth -- Mohandas Gandhi. 150. Ariel -- Sylvia Plath. 151. Jejuri -- Arun Kolatkar. 152. Missing Person -- Adil Jussawalla. 153. All About H Hatterr -- GV Desani. 154. The Ground Beneath Her Feet -- Salman Rushdie. 155. A Fine Balance -- Rohinton Mistry. 156. Tales from Firozsha Baag -- Rohinton Mistry. 157. Amores Perros -- Alejandro G Iñárritu. 158. Samira Makhmalbaf on Wikipedia and IMDb. 159. Ingmar Bergman on Wikipedia and IMDb. 160. The Silence, Autumn Sonata and Wild Strawberries - Ingmar Bergman. 161. The Mahabharata. 162. Yuganta — Irawati Karve. 163. Kalyug -- Shyam Benegal. 164. The Hungry Tide -- Amitav Ghosh. 165. On Hinduism and The Hindus -- Wendy Doniger. 166. I, Lalla: The Poems of Lal Dĕd — Lal Dĕd (translated by Ranjit Hoskote). 167. The Essential Kabir -- Arvind Krishna Mehrotra. 168. The Absent Traveller -- Arvind Krishna Mehrotra. 169. These My Words: The Penguin Book of Indian Poetry -- Edited by Eunice de Souza and Melanie Silgardo. This episode is sponsored by CTQ Compounds. Check out The Daily Reader and FutureStack. Use the code UNSEEN for Rs 2500 off. Check out Amit's online course, The Art of Clear Writing. And subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free! Episode art: ‘He is Reading' by Simahina.

Music City Murder
#024 Claude Garrett, Part 2 l MCM

Music City Murder

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2022 19:55


In part 2 of our true crime exploration of the death of Lorie Lance, the podcast will discuss what happened after Claude Garrett was convicted of first-degree murder. The main article guiding my discussion comes from a report by Liliana Segura on The Intercept, entitled "Playing with Fire: How Junk Science Sent Claude Garrett to Prison for Life."  Links: The Music City Murder Patreon My new novel, Not Dark Yet, on Amazon Review the podcast on Apple Podcasts  

Lopez Radio
383 - Not Dark Yet with T. Blake Braddy

Lopez Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 118:53


T. Blake Braddy is one of the original guests on Lopez Radio, WAY back. He is an author, educator, and podcast host. We talk at length about his latest book "Not Dark Yet" as well as some of his other works. From there, we move into talking about movies, TV, chess, and things that have been on his mind. PICK UP HIS LATEST BOOK "Not Dark Yet" on Amazon! (Links Below) T. Blake Braddy's Links: Amazon Author Page: https://amzn.to/3hQrHNx Twitter: https://twitter.com/blakebraddy ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ My Socials: Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/lopezradio​ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lopezradio​ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Community Discord: https://discord.gg/nsQYRSJ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Podcasts: Lopez Radio: https://link.chtbl.com/LopezRadio​ Parentally Unprepared: https://link.chtbl.com/ParentallyUnprepared ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Music by Spuntastic: https://spuntastic.bandcamp.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lopezradio/support

tv amazon community discord not dark yet lopez radio
Diary Of Amy Rigby
Here In The Vestibule

Diary Of Amy Rigby

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2022 16:22


Time change and times change: Joyce; Sally, Frank & Emma...and Dad. Track in this episode Not Dark Yet

Song and a Chat
Too Dark To See

Song and a Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2022 33:06


Episode#126: Too Dark To See   (Song starts at 3:33) Hi, for this episode I recorded a conversation with Paul Dredge, the co-composer of 'Too Dark Too See'. Although the audio quality isn't quite up to scratch, I think this was a well worth while exercise. The resulting candid conversation offers an insight into our songwriting style/relationship (and friendship) in an engaging and entertaining manner. 'Too Dark To See' is track number 3 off our new folk-rock album, The Untrodden Track. It's one of my favourites on the album. Where did this song spring from? I remember I worked backwards from the title -  which may or may not have come from this (not sure if I'm making it up - perhaps the similarity struck me later): I'm a big fan of Bob Dylan. His (brilliant) song Not Dark Yet from the album Time Out Of Mind may just have inspired me… what if it was ‘too dark' ? How would that work as a song idea? … Us songwriters are magpies for sure. We are what we listen to, that's for sure. Music inspires more music, art inspires more art, life inspires art..and ..art inspires life. I think it's a cyclical evolving scenario. You'll get to hear (including some actual audio) about how Paul provided the chords and feel as I improvised the melody over the top. This is the way we do it when we write in the same room together. We stumbled across this process and discovered it works really well for us when we were on the road together. I write the lyrics before hand and we take it from there together, in the moment. We work quickly together. It's great fun to write songs like this with Paul. You have to be very supportive of each other. It comes down to mutual respect. A healthy dose of humour appears to be a key when mistakes are made. It's a great way to diffuse any potential tension and keep the ball rolling.. I also think any hints of frustration or manipulation during the process shuts the muse down. I'm particularly happy with the arrangement of this song. You'll get to hear it on this episode, of course. The interplay between the guitar and piano underpinning the vocal harmony, etc (If you like it, please do check out the album). Here's the link to all 12 songs - 30 sec samples - and links to streaming for the full album on your favourite platform. I ran out of time to talk about the lyrics of Too Dark To See (You can read the finished lyrics on my blog post), as usual www.petepascoe.wordpress.com I found the original draft today and discovered a few of the edits that were made. This is part of the usual practice of writing a song... One step at a time.  Never lose sight of the goal I keep reminding  myself as I follow the winding path,  became One step at a time.  Never lose sight of the goal I keep reminding  myself as I fall I think this is much stronger. The word fall is so unexpected. The black humour here allows for a more digestible semi- tragic image of ...hopelessness in the moment. Straight away this opening statement establishes the tone and sets the scene in terms of the narrator not making any headway at all on the path for the moment. I think we can all relate to that. It's a bit like the stand up comedian making a personal confession - it's a way of drawing the audience in, gaining their trust by divulging something quite personal about themselves. You don't get much time in a 3 minute song. Every word has to count & perhaps match the syllable count of the line in the previous verse so: I see Too dark to see,   And There's nothing to hear Just a high ringing in my ear became Too dark to see,   And There's nothing to fear Just a ring in my ear Again, I think this is much stronger: acknowledging it'll probably all work out on the end one way or another , while the ring in the ear alludes to the strange thing that can happen at times of a total awareness of an acute emotional response. At the time, everything else seems to diminish except the extreme moment at hand. There's no escape. eg,

Giocare col fuoco
Giocare col fuoco #26 - 3 aprile 2022

Giocare col fuoco

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2022 58:32


Libri: Patrizia Cavalli, Vita meravigliosa (Einaudi)..Walt Whitman, Foglie d'erba (Mondadori, a cura di G. Conte)..John O'Connell, Il book club di David Bowie (Blackie Edizioni, trad. F. Coppola) ..Musica: Cindy Lauper, Girls Just Want to Have Funa..Lang Lang, The Piano Book..F. De Gregori, Buffalo Bill..Antonin Dvorak, La sinfonia dal nuovo mondo..Bob Dylan, Not Dark Yet..Eno, Music for airports..David Bowie, Black Tie, White Noise..Sharon Van Etten, Porta

Back To Back
JA Makin' Me Crazy! Not Dark Yet in Laker Land + Worried Warriors? ReBorn in Bean Town & Wilt's 100

Back To Back

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 50:02


In this week's Point of Contention. Marcus Thompson and Jay King debate! Hosted by Zach Harper.Take 1: JA Makin Me Crazy!Take 2: It's Not Dark Yet, But It's Getting There (Laker Land)Take3: Worried Warriors?Take 4: Celtics Reborn (Again)Take 5: Wilt / Zero to 100 Real Quick! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Back To Back
JA Makin' Me Crazy! Not Dark Yet in Laker Land + Worried Warriors? ReBorn in Bean Town & Wilt's 100

Back To Back

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 55:47


In this week's Point of Contention. Marcus Thompson and Jay King debate! Hosted by Zach Harper. Take 1: JA Makin Me Crazy! Take 2: It's Not Dark Yet, But It's Getting There (Laker Land) Take3: Worried Warriors? Take 4: Celtics Reborn (Again) Take 5: Wilt / Zero to 100 Real Quick! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Tom Petty Project
No Second Thoughts

The Tom Petty Project

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022 12:16


Hello friends! Today's episode covers the 8th track from You're Gonna Get It!, No Second Thoughts.If you want to listen to the song before you listen to the episode, you can find it here: https://youtu.be/ZHOtRItCHXoI talked a little about the killer live version from 1981, recorded in Philadelphia, that was included on the Live Anthology boxset. You can find that here: https://youtu.be/T483OoprENYOne last link I wanted to give you is Bob Dylan's masterpiece, Not Dark Yet, from 1997's brilliant Time Out of Mind. The chord progression in the chorus of this song really reminds me of the same progression, albeit in a different key, in the yeah yeah ooh yeah yeah section of No Second Thoughts.Don't forget to follow us on social media, like, subscribe, and please, leave a rating if you like the show:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thetompettyprojectTwitter: https://twitter.com/TomPettyProjectInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thetompettyproject/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCt6BLRWuuAR43zHpNKIirOwSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-tom-petty-project. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

DJ Andrey Golubev
DJ Andrey Golubev to Depeche Mode with love part seven (Dominatrix remixes)

DJ Andrey Golubev

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2021 94:42


DM7-DOMINATRIX @ DJ Andrey Golubev P.S. Дэйв Гаан и проект Soulsavers анонсировали новый альбом "Imposter" (Самозванец), в котором переосмыслены песни таких исполнителей, как Нил Янг, Пи Джей Харви, Кэт Пауэр, Боб Дилан и многие другие. Последний совместный альбом фронтмена Depeche Mode и Soulsavers (Rich Machin) описывается в материалах прессы как переосмысление 12 песен “из разных жанров и периодов времени”, а не альбом каверов. Он выйдет 12 ноября на лейбле Columbia. В альбом включены переосмысления Power's ‘Metal Heart', Young's ‘A Man Needs a Maid', Harvey's ‘The Desperate Kingdom of Love', Gene Clark's ‘Where My Love Lies Asleep', Dylan's ‘Not Dark Yet' и Mark Lanegan‘s ‘Dark Religion'.. Гаан сказал о проекте: “Когда я слушаю голоса и песни других людей – что более важно, то, как они их поют и интерпретируют слова, – я чувствую себя как дома. Я отождествляю себя с этим. Это утешает меня больше, чем что-либо другое. “На пластинке нет ни одного исполнителя, который бы меня не тронул”, - сказал он о представленных работах. Гаан добавил: “Я знаю, что мы сделали что–то особенное, и я надеюсь, что другие люди почувствуют это, и это приведет их в небольшое путешествие - особенно людей, которые любят музыку и делают это годами”. ‘Imposter' tracklist: 01. ‘The Dark End Of The Street' 02. ‘Strange Religion' 03. ‘Lilac Wine' 04. ‘I Held My Baby Last Night' 05. ‘A Man Needs A Maid' 06. ‘Metal Heart' 07. ‘Shut Me Down' 08. ‘Where My Love Lies Asleep' 09. ‘Smile' 10. ‘The Desperate Kingdom Of Love' 11. ‘Not Dark Yet' 12. ‘Always On My Mind' Первая песня с альбома, "Metal Heart", выходит в эту пятницу (8 октября). "Самозванец" был записан вживую группой из десяти человек в знаменитой студии звукозаписи Shangri-La в Малибу, штат Калифорния, в ноябре 2019 года. Это следует за предыдущим сотрудничеством Гаана с Soulsavers, "Angels & Ghosts" 2015 года, после чего проект стал известен как Дейв Гаан и Soulsavers. До этого "The Light The Dead See" был выпущен в 2012 году под лейблом Soulsavers (с участием Дейва Гаана). Soulsavers, в состав которых входят Мэчин и Иэн Гловер, работали с другими музыкантами над совместными проектами, включая Ланегана и Джоша Хайндена. Согласно материалам прессы, только Мачин, а не Гловер, работал с Гааном над "Самозванцем'. #davegahan #soulservers #newalbum #newsingle #imposter

Future Beats Podcast Edition
8 Track Autosoul, Velvety Pop, Afro Cuban Noir

Future Beats Podcast Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2021 55:34


Como bien sabéis el tiempo es relativo y es algo que podéis comprobar regularmente en Future Beats Radio Show. En esta ocasión tu host, Alex García Amat, te llevará a un universo paralelo de 2001 donde Beck podría haber sido reemplazado por Kelley Stoltz que debutó entonces con un álbum en el que se ocupó absolutamente de todo gracias a su Tascam 388. De vuelta a nuestro futuro inmediato comprobaremos cómo belleza y protesta conviven en prodigiosa armonía en el primer álbum con temas inéditos del gran Caetano Veloso en una década, que es el tiempo que lleva Future Beats "en antena". Nos haremos otras preguntas: ¿Y si Gainsbourg y Michel Colombier hubiera confiado a Jarvis Cocker sus peripecias sonoras? ¿Y si Orquesta Akokán hubiera tenido al Bárbaro del Ritmo en sus filas?¿Si Dylan no hubiera estrenado su propia versión de Not Dark Yet nos parecería tan adecuada la relectura uptempo de Tom Jones y Ethan Jonhs? Ah, hoy también tenemos preguntas para ti si escuchas con atención...Bienvenidos a Future Beats Radio Show. Esta es la música que nos conmueve.

Thoughts On Leading With Greatness
It Looks Like I'm Moving, But

Thoughts On Leading With Greatness

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 8:48


I'm an enemy of the unlived meaningless life.Bob DylanWhy do you get out of bed in the morning? Just to roll stones?Bob Dylan's 1997 song “Not Dark Yet” offers a keen observation undergirded by profound wisdom. Actually, it offers many keen observations about life and aging while the entire song is undergirded by profound wisdom, but I want to look at just one couplet and the second line of the couplet in particular.I was born here and I'll die here against my willI know it looks like I'm moving, but I'm standing stillIn these lines, the singer lets us know that his consciousness can never escape the pull of his origins, that his end will be a return to his beginning. No matter how much he does, no matter how far he goes, his life will end as it began — in opacity, in mystery, even, perhaps, in nothingness. All that movement that fills his life, and he will just end up where he started. Dylan's view of life is nearly Sisyphean, that is if Sisyphus rolled his boulder up a steep incline just the once, scrambled after it as it tumbled back down, and promptly expired upon reaching the base of the hill.Dylan's lines encompass the entirety of each of our earthly existences, but we experience this frenetic inertness — this spinning-top activity — on a daily basis. As any entrepreneur or anyone else who has undertaken a difficult and complex project can tell you, this idea of standing still while appearing feverishly active is a given. We are all the children of Sisyphus, his little Sisyphi/ae, rolling our stones up our steep inclines only to see them roll down again and again.Depressing, eh? Maybe discouraging? Perhaps you are thinking right now, “Geez, Jim, way to kill my buzz. Why should I even get out of bed in the morning? After all, I am just going to end up in bed later tonight.” True enough.Rollin', rollin', rollin'. Keep them doggies rollin'The French-Algerian philosopher and novelist Albert Camus suggests some relief for our Sisyphean existence by reconceptualizing Sisyphus as rolling his rock to the peak and then heroically, enthusiastically bounding down the hill after it, excited to get back to work. Absurd, yes?But there is a difference between the seeming Sisyphean nature of our day to day experience and the eternal torture Sisyphus suffers, and there is a reason, as Camus suggests, for bounding after that rolling stone. Sisyphus had offended the gods by, well, doing lots of things. He was a man too clever by half who outsmarted the gods on a couple of occasions, but he was also just an all around arrogant bad guy. His punishment, then, was fitting since it involved mindless, pointless labor and futility — the opposite of guile and cleverness and a proper comeuppance for arrogance. In fact, it is that very lack of mental stimulation and autonomy that makes tedious, repetitive work so soul crushing, which is why bosses who regard their employees as nothing more than expendible automatons should spend eternity pushing stones. But I digress.I was about to offer some solace in in the midst of our Sisyphean existence. The difference between most of us and Sisyphus is that for us, on occasion, whether at work or in other aspects of our lives, that rock doesn't quite roll all the way down to the bottom of the hill. Sometimes it establishes a new base, a bit higher than the old base. And sometimes, just sometimes, we can push that rock just a little further, an incremental improvement that we can build on.I am not being a Pollyanna here. Whatever the case, we still are pushing a rock most of the time, even when we are enjoying ourselves or are making modest progress. It's just what we do. We try and we try and we try, And when we stop,We die. AnonymousMy point is that we are not at essence Sisyphuses, not just yet. We can and do make progress no matter how futile it all seems. Then again, one could argue, and I may just argue myself, that, yes, we can achieve things while we live, but as Dylan suggests, don't we all just find ourselves back where we started in the end? Don't we come from Idunno and end in Idunno? Whatever your religious convictions on the subject, as a matter of earthly existence and human consciousness, the answer is yes. If you believe in a great beyond, that is a different plane of existence. Even if you believe in reincarnation, it is all a repetition of this plane of existence but not the same experience. Our conscious arrival on this plane is shrouded in mystery as is our departure.Merry Christmas, you wonderful old building and loan!Sure enough, we are just rollin', rollin', rollin', but maybe there's a little more to it. If you have seen Frank Capra's treacly Christmas movie, It's a Wonderful Life (1946), you may know where I am going with this. In the movie, George, a small-town moneylender, falls on hard times and, after unwisely mixing his treacle with alcohol, wishes that he had never existed. An angel grants his wish, and George gets to see what the world (or at least his town) would be like without him. It is sort of a twist on Dickens' “A Christmas Carol,” but with a doofus angel and nice-guy Jimmy Stewart at the center of the action. What George witnesses in this world without him is a town in disarray, and he realizes his life has had meaning in that he had improved the lives of his loved ones and his entire community. And, in a triumphant tear-jerking finale, he is also awarded a leg lamp. Now had he been a hotdog vendor in New York City rather than a small-town banker, the drama of his non-existence would be dwarfed and dampened enough to ruin the plot, but that does not mean that a hotdog vendor in New York City cannot live a meaningful life. The hotdog vendor's epiphany just doesn't make as good a basis for an emotionally manipulative movie.Existential NeutralityWhat I am pushing toward here is a sort of existential equivalent of carbon neutrality. The idea of carbon neutrality is that you offset what ever carbon your behavior releases into the atmosphere. So, as your car spews carbon monoxide on your daily drive to work, you then would plant enough carbon-absorbing trees (11,603?) to counterbalance your pollutant output. In my scheme of existential neutrality, at the very least, you would do enough good in the world in terms of the benevolence you generate, the positives you produce, and the uplift you provide others that it offsets the harm that we all do. In fact, ideally, you would move beyond neutrality and leave the world improved. This improvement has little to do with how many kids you have or whether you have kids at all or how much money you give to charity. It is not about numbers but is a matter of weighing values, contribution, and selflessness. When you reach the top of that hill with your boulder for the last time, what sort of hill do you leave behind? Will you have achieved existential neutrality? Will you have surpassed neutrality and contributed to the betterment of the hill or perhaps its besting?When all is said and done, when the deal goes down, when it comes time to shed this mortal coil, during your final memorial service, will people attend merely out of obligation, or will they attend out of profound regret for what the world has lost? Or will it be to gloat and to make sure the b*****d is really dead?Each of our existences can be Sisyphean in the extreme, contributing no more (or even less) than we take and reducing or maintaining rather than enhancing the good in the world. Or we can push that boulder a little further each time. Yeah, we will lose ground frequently, but just a little more upward mobility and perhaps we, like George, can finally rest secure in the knowledge that our existence has left the world somewhat better off than how we found it.Query of the WeekThe George Bailey ChallengeWhat do you think is required of individuals if we are to leave the world better off than how we found it?Share your thoughts on this topic or open a discussion by leaving a comment below or by contacting me directly by email: Let me know what you think. I welcome your comments and questions. Please click on the button below or, if you prefer, email me at jim@jimsalvucci.com.Post this essay on social media or send it by email to someone you want to intrigue/annoy.Subscribe to receive my weekly newsletter and special editions directly to your mailbox.Are you ready to improve your ability to achieve your organizational mission?Visit my website to learn what I have to offer. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jimsalvucci.substack.com

Sound OFF! with Brad Bennett
Monday 5/24/21 hour 3

Sound OFF! with Brad Bennett

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2021 40:04


Have you heard about the vaccine lottery how about virtue signaling, we did have a Sound Off first of sorts and seeing its Dylan's 80th birthday it seemed fitting to end the program with Not Dark Yet... See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

sound off not dark yet
Write Now with Scrivener
Episode 1: Peter Robinson, Author of the Alan Banks Crime Fiction Series

Write Now with Scrivener

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2021 25:57


We welcome Peter Robinson, best-selling author of the Alan Banks crime series. Peter has written more than two dozen novels, and discusses his characters, how he uses music in his novels, and how Scrivener helps him manage his manuscripts. Show notes: Peter Robinson (https://inspectorbanks.com) Latest novel: Not Dark Yet (https://inspectorbanks.com/books/not-dark-yet-2021/) Bob Dylan: Not Dark Yet (https://www.bobdylan.com/songs/not-dark-yet/) Learn more about Scrivener (https://www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivener/overview), and check out the ebook Take Control of Scrivener (https://www.literatureandlatte.com/store). If you like the podcast, please follow it in Apple Podcasts (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/write-now-with-scrivener/id1568550068) or your favorite podcast app. Leave a rating or review, and tell your friends. And check out past episodes of Write Now with Scrivener (https://podcast.scrivenerapp.com).

Hard Rain & Slow Trains: Bob Dylan & Fellow Travelers
11/19/2020: "All Those Who've Sailed With Me": Bob Dylan & His Bands pt 6

Hard Rain & Slow Trains: Bob Dylan & Fellow Travelers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2020 63:00


Tonight we conclude our six-episode series featuring Dylan's bands over the decades by covering 2003-2019. On "Who Did It Better?" the song is "Not Dark Yet," and we ask you who did it better live, Eric Clapton in 2009 on the eve of Dylan's 68th birthday or Bob Dylan in 2019? Go to our Twitter page @RainTrains and vote between the two versions.

A Bob Dylan Primer
Time is in the Mind

A Bob Dylan Primer

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2020 31:15


Never a dull moment for Mr. D, he contracts a serious infection of the heart, sings for the Pope, and releases his strongest album in 20 years.   Episode links: Not Dark Yet – Dylan...

pope not dark yet
Buzzsaw 2020
Episode 5_America Inc.

Buzzsaw 2020

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2020 30:02


In this episode, host Sean Stone welcomes guest, Douglas Cirignano, author of "American Conspiracies and Cover Ups" as they discuss The New World Order, The Illuminati, and the systems designed to imprison our liberties. . Brought to you by Monument Productions Thank you for tuning in, sharing, and subscribing. For more Monumental Moments find us at ​www.monumentmedia.io . Buzzsaw 2020's theme song was created by musician Nathan Owen, titled "Keep it Running", you can find more of his music available on Spotify or iTunes. Featured music by Ray Lamontagne, Empty, Jay Z, 444, Bob Dylan, Not Dark Yet, Tomorrow is a Long Time, Shelter from the Storm, & Pablo Escobar Remix Douglas Cirignano's book, American Conspiracies & Cover Ups, can be found on Amazon Subscribe to Buzzsaw 2020 on Soundwise

Sign on the Window
090 – "Not Dark Yet"

Sign on the Window

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2019 46:48


Sign on the Window isn't the Bob Dylan podcast you need, but it's definitely the one that you want! Each week we select a Dylan song at random, live with the song for a week (or two) and then get together to discuss. This week we talk about death with 1997's "Not Dark Yet." Kelly and Daniel talk context (4:00), the song itself (6:00), the verses and the role of letters in Dylan's songs (12:00). We hype our playlist, share our recommendations for this week and close. As always, full show notes at our website. You can also follow along with our weekly real-time Spotify playlist – See That My Playlist is Kept Clean – or just listen to this episode's playlist and join the conversation on Twitter, message us on Facebook, and like on Instagram. And if you're loving us, consider our Patreon. For as little as one dollar you get early access to every episode we do as soon as they're edited (and a dedicated feed just for you) and exclusive content that'll only ever be on Patreon. Thanks! Next week: I'll be with you when the last episode of Music Video Month! goes down

spotify window bob dylan not dark yet kept clean
Talking Vision
Talking Vision Episode 434 25th July 2018

Talking Vision

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2018 28:29


This week, Stella has an extended conversation with Emeritus professor David Walker OAM who was acknowledged recently on the Queens Birthday Honours list for significant service to education as an academic in the field of Australian studies, and to international relations. A distinguished Australian cultural historian, Professor Walker is a leading authority in the study of Australian perceptions of Asia. His eyesight deteriorated suddenly at the end of 2004 as a result of macular degeneration. When his ophthalmologist told him that he was now "legally blind", his immediate response was to ask if it was possible for him to be "illegally blind" instead. He wrote the personal history Not Dark Yet – a book that has been described as “funny, scholarly, driven in its own quiet way to bring the darkness of the past to light.”

vision australian emeritus not dark yet professor walker
BLUES. Дельта Миссисипи
Дельта Миссисипи — Выпуск 61

BLUES. Дельта Миссисипи

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2017 66:28


В эфире «Дельты Миссисипи» –  плейлист отборной корневой музыки от Артура Ямпольского, которой точно не услышать на FM. Продолжаем изучать новые альбомы, в этот раз пяти артистов: альбом группы Delta Moon из Атланты «Cabbagetown»; пять треков из второй студийной работы «The Order of Time» от Valerie June; кантри-поп от музыканта из Миссисипи — Charlie Worsham; традиционный блюз от Rockin' Johnny Burgin и Allison Moore & Shelby Lynne – кантри-рок певицы с альбомом «Not Dark Yet». 

Muziek voor Volwassenen (40UP Radio)
Muziek voor Volwassenen 187

Muziek voor Volwassenen (40UP Radio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2017 58:21


Johan Derksen is er om 20:00 uur weer met drie uur Muziek Voor Volwassenen op 40UP Radio. Country zanger Keith Whitley vormde de rode draad. CD van de week: "Not Dark Yet" van de zusjes Shelby Lynn en Allison Moorer.

Muziek voor Volwassenen (40UP Radio)
Muziek voor Volwassenen 188

Muziek voor Volwassenen (40UP Radio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2017 58:40


Johan Derksen is er om 20:00 uur weer met drie uur Muziek Voor Volwassenen op 40UP Radio. Country zanger Keith Whitley vormde de rode draad. CD van de week: "Not Dark Yet" van de zusjes Shelby Lynn en Allison Moorer.

Muziek voor Volwassenen (40UP Radio)
Muziek voor Volwassenen 189

Muziek voor Volwassenen (40UP Radio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2017 58:48


Johan Derksen is er om 20:00 uur weer met drie uur Muziek Voor Volwassenen op 40UP Radio. Country zanger Keith Whitley vormde de rode draad. CD van de week: "Not Dark Yet" van de zusjes Shelby Lynn en Allison Moorer.

KRCB-FM: Second Row Center
"Quality of Life" - October 19, 2016

KRCB-FM: Second Row Center

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2016 4:00


Have you ever noticed that most stories that appear, on the surface, to be all about death and dying, actually turn out to be all about life and living? It’s true. Think about Joan Didion’s memoir ‘The Year of Magical Thinking,’ or C.S. Lewis’s ‘A Grief Observed.’ What about Anne Tyler’s ‘The Accidental Tourist,’ or movies like ‘Heaven Can Wait,” ‘The Descendants,’ or Pixar’s ‘Up,’ or even plays like the recent ‘Fun Home’ and the obvious ‘Death of a Salesman.’ All of these stories use the inevitability of death and dying, and the trappings of grief, to cast a clear, comparative light on the many joys, privileges, and bittersweet consolations of surviving death, of finding a way through grief, of being alive. In such a spirit of philosophical death-musing comes Jane Alexander’s deliciously rich drama The Quality of Life, now playing at Cinnabar Theater in Petaluma. Featuring four superb performances, the play is a beautifully-crafted series of alternately heavy and lighthearted discussions about death and life, and everything in between—culminating in a gorgeous two-part climax that is at once breathtaking in its poetic simplicity and stunning in its blunt clear-eyed wisdom. Dinah and Bill—played by Susan Gundanas and Richard Pallaziol—are conservative Christians from the Midwest, each struggling in their own way with the recent brutal death of their teenage daughter. When Dinah learns that her cousin Jeanette—played by Elly Lichenstein—has lost her Northern California home in a wildfire, and that her husband Neil—James Pelican—is in the final stages of cancer, the straight-laced Midwesterners decide to visit their hippy-dippy in-laws, and are stunned to find their hard-hit in-laws living blissfully in a yurt beside the blackened and skeletal remains of their house. Dinah and Bill are in for another surprise when they learn that Neil, who inhales a great deal of pot as relief from the pain, plans to take his own life in a few weeks – after he and Jeanette throw one last blowout of a party. What perhaps sounds depressing and heavy is anything but in Anderson’s lovely, humor-filled script. In fact, the level of intellectual debate that unfolds between this oppositional foursome is at times exhilarating, as this mismatched foursome power through a list of hot-button topics, from medical marijuana and right-to-die issues to the question of whether God actually truly has a plan for our lives. The striking and unusual set, by Nina Ball, is truly impressive, all scorched timber at crazy angles on a patch of real dirt complete with a rather realistic campfire. And the lighting by Jon Tracy effectively gives a sense of time, from early morning to late evening. Taylor Korobow’s sensitive direction is unfussy and clean, focusing on building intensity through the ever-shifting relationships of the all-too-human characters. Though an unnecessary opening sequence, set to Bob Dylan’s It’s Not Dark Yet, is more confusing and odd than engaging, and mainly just serves to delay the start of the action, Korobow’s work with her actors is marvelous, drawing effective and dialed down performances that are powerful without pushing too hard. I encourage you to overlook what might sound like a downer, and take a chance on Quality of Life, a gripping, moving, funny and life affirming examination of the ways that death, ironically enough, does have ways to remind us that life, for all its shocks and snares and unhappy twists, really is worth living, and worth savoring, right to the end. ‘Quality of Life’ runs through October 30 at Cinnabar Theater, cinnabaretheater.org

Pod Dylan
Pod Dylan #4 - Not Dark Yet

Pod Dylan

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2016 21:21


POD DYLAN Episode 4 - Not Dark Yet Rob welcomes fellow Fire and Water Network All-Star Ryan Daly (SECRET ORIGINS PODCAST) to talk about "Not Dark Yet", from Bob Dylan's Grammy-winning 1997 album TIME OUT OF MIND. Have a question or comment? RYAN DALY: Secret Origins Podcast E-MAIL: firewaterpodcast@comcast.net Follow POD DYLAN on Twitter: @Pod_Dylan Subscribe to the show on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/pod-dylan/id1095013228 This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER – https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page – https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts  

Deakin Matters
'Not Dark Yet: A personal history'

Deakin Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2011 11:01


'Not Dark Yet: A personal history' is the title of recently launched a book by David Walker, a Professor of Australian Studies at Deakin University.