Podcast appearances and mentions of Terry Phillips

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Best podcasts about Terry Phillips

Latest podcast episodes about Terry Phillips

PRN - At the Track
EP 2447 Southeast Edition: Carter McMurray, Terry Phillips, Adam Stewart

PRN - At the Track

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024


Carter McMurray, US Legends, Road Course World Finals winner: Terry Phillips, 5-Time Turkey Bowl winner; and Adam Stewart from Crate Racing USA previewing Swainsboro Raceway's Turkey 100 are this week's guests.

PRN - At the Track
EP 2447 Mid-America Edition: Terry Phillips, Adam Stewart, Carter McMurray

PRN - At the Track

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024


Carter McMurray, US Legends, Road Course World Finals winner: Terry Phillips, 5-Time Turkey Bowl winner; and Adam Stewart from Crate Racing USA previewing Swainsboro Raceway's Turkey 100 are this week's guests.

Jokermen: a podcast about bob dylan
Lou Reed: WHY DON'T YOU SMILE NOW with Jason Stern & Don Fleming

Jokermen: a podcast about bob dylan

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2024 69:09


The Jokermen speak with Jason Stern & Don Fleming of the Lou Reed archive team about Lou's earliest days as a songwriter, The Primitives, Terry Phillips & Tony Conrad, and the essential new Light In The Attic compilation Why Don't You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records. COP "WHY DON'T YOU SMILE NOW" NOW

Nightlife
Should voluntary assisted dying be available for 'a completed life'?

Nightlife

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2024 33:23


Should a terminal illness be the only reason to access voluntary assisted dying or is there a case to make for those who feel they have a 'completed life'? 

The Milwaukee Sports Performance Podcast
Physical Therapy for High Level Throwers

The Milwaukee Sports Performance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 73:43


In this episode, I am joined by Terry Phillips, the in-house physical therapist at Driveline Baseball, and recently, he's been killing the internet game with amazing memes. At Driveline, Terry has the opportunity to support countless baseball players at all levels from high school, college to professional. Do you see any commonalities or key performance indicators of the best throwers?What is the first thing that comes to mind when you hear “arm care”?What do you think about the current “market” or business opportunity to purchase online “arm care” programs?PT's role in caring for these high level throwersWhen guys are chasing velocity goals, do you expect them to feel great all the time?How do you decide when a player should stop throwing completely vs. modify a throwing program?His take on the Tommy John surgeryDon't miss out on this unique PT perspective of keeping high velocity throwers healthy! Whether you're a fellow PT or in a throwing sport yourself, you'll find this episode intriguing from beginning to end.

Imagine Air Theater
Episode 11: Fixer Upper

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2024 11:48


"Fixer Upper" is written and produced by Terry Phillips. It premiered on Jan. 8, 2024. In this eleventh episode of our anthology series of short audio plays, a prospective real estate buyer is shocked by what is on the market. The cast features Stella Valente as the agent and Chris Tilley as the client. Script consultant: Mark Boyce Producer: Genese Phillips Casting director: Stella Valente Theme song from Roman Senyk Episode music "Ultra" by Savfk Commercial cue ("Swing Time") from Music by Pedro Commercial vocals by the Echo Valley Singers Imagine Air Theater is in the style of Old Time Radio (OTR) entertainment, but with contemporary themes. These are stories of the world as it might have been. The world as it could be. Sometimes inspiring tales. Sometimes cautionary tales. If you like these plays and want to hear more, please become a patron. Visit https://www.Patreon.com/ImagineAir You can also support us at https://Imagine-Air-Theater.com/Suppo...https://imagine-air-theater.com/Support-us/ NEXT EPISODE COMING SOON!

This Day in Jack Benny
Terry Phillips (1983 Mel Blanc)

This Day in Jack Benny

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2023 37:14


Terry Phillips is a former CBS reporter who, in 1983 had a chance to interview the great Mel Blanc. Terry is also the producer of a audio drama podcast called Imagine Air Theater, and his new play "Ronald Reagan Saves the World" premiered last week at the Center Stage Theater in Santa Barbara, California. Mel Blanc Interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fsWZVbLllQ Imagine Air Theater here: https://www.imagine-air-theater.com Ronald Reagan Saves the World https://www.reaganplay.com

Jim On The Air
JOTA E 56 Ronald Reagan Saves the World

Jim On The Air

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2023 23:27


On this week's episode of Jim On The Air, I interview the writer, producer, director, and actor of the one-person show Ronald Reagan Saves the World. Terry Phillips and Paul Messinger will join me in the virtual studio to talk about their play which is making its world premiere at our very own Center Stage Theater in Santa Barbara! The play opens September 1 - 10. Be sure to listen to the podcast to learn more about the play, how it came about, and the process both Terry and Paul used to create this fascinating piece about Reagan, the man, as well as the historic figure. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jim-sirianni/support

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs
Episode 164: “White Light/White Heat” by the Velvet Underground

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2023


Episode 164 of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at "White Light/White Heat" and the career of the Velvet Underground. This is a long one, lasting three hours and twenty minutes. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a twenty-three minute bonus episode available, on "Why Don't You Smile Now?" by the Downliners Sect. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt's irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ Errata I say the Velvet Underground didn't play New York for the rest of the sixties after 1966. They played at least one gig there in 1967, but did generally avoid the city. Also, I refer to Cale and Conrad as the other surviving members of the Theater of Eternal Music. Sadly Conrad died in 2016. Resources No Mixcloud this week, as there are too many songs by the Velvet Underground, and some of the avant-garde pieces excerpted run to six hours or more. I used a lot of resources for this one. Up-Tight: The Velvet Underground Story by Victor Bockris and Gerard Malanga is the best book on the group as a group. I also used Joe Harvard's 33 1/3 book on The Velvet Underground and Nico. Bockris also wrote one of the two biographies of Reed I referred to, Transformer. The other was Lou Reed by Anthony DeCurtis. Information on Cale mostly came from Sedition and Alchemy by Tim Mitchell. Information on Nico came from Nico: The Life and Lies of an Icon by Richard Witts. I used Draw a Straight Line and Follow it by Jeremy Grimshaw as my main source for La Monte Young, The Roaring Silence by David Revill for John Cage, and Warhol: A Life as Art by Blake Gopnik for Warhol. I also referred to the Criterion Collection Blu-Ray of the 2021 documentary The Velvet Underground.  The definitive collection of the Velvet Underground's music is the sadly out-of-print box set Peel Slowly and See, which contains the four albums the group made with Reed in full, plus demos, outtakes, and live recordings. Note that the digital version of the album as sold by Amazon for some reason doesn't include the last disc -- if you want the full box set you have to buy a physical copy. All four studio albums have also been released and rereleased many times over in different configurations with different numbers of CDs at different price points -- I have used the "45th Anniversary Super-Deluxe" versions for this episode, but for most people the standard CD versions will be fine. Sadly there are no good shorter compilation overviews of the group -- they tend to emphasise either the group's "pop" mode or its "avant-garde" mode to the exclusion of the other. Patreon This podcast is brought to you by the generosity of my backers on Patreon. Why not join them? Transcript Before I begin this episode, there are a few things to say. This introductory section is going to be longer than normal because, as you will hear, this episode is also going to be longer than normal. Firstly, I try to warn people about potentially upsetting material in these episodes. But this is the first episode for 1968, and as you will see there is a *profound* increase in the amount of upsetting and disturbing material covered as we go through 1968 and 1969. The story is going to be in a much darker place for the next twenty or thirty episodes. And this episode is no exception. As always, I try to deal with everything as sensitively as possible, but you should be aware that the list of warnings for this one is so long I am very likely to have missed some. Among the topics touched on in this episode are mental illness, drug addiction, gun violence, racism, societal and medical homophobia, medical mistreatment of mental illness, domestic abuse, rape, and more. If you find discussion of any of those subjects upsetting, you might want to read the transcript. Also, I use the term "queer" freely in this episode. In the past I have received some pushback for this, because of a belief among some that "queer" is a slur. The following explanation will seem redundant to many of my listeners, but as with many of the things I discuss in the podcast I am dealing with multiple different audiences with different levels of awareness and understanding of issues, so I'd like to beg those people's indulgence a moment. The term "queer" has certainly been used as a slur in the past, but so have terms like "lesbian", "gay", "homosexual" and others. In all those cases, the term has gone from a term used as a self-identifier, to a slur, to a reclaimed slur, and back again many times. The reason for using that word, specifically, here is because the vast majority of people in this story have sexualities or genders that don't match the societal norms of their times, but used labels for themselves that have shifted in meaning over the years. There are at least two men in the story, for example, who are now dead and referred to themselves as "homosexual", but were in multiple long-term sexually-active relationships with women. Would those men now refer to themselves as "bisexual" or "pansexual" -- terms not in widespread use at the time -- or would they, in the relatively more tolerant society we live in now, only have been in same-gender relationships? We can't know. But in our current context using the word "homosexual" for those men would lead to incorrect assumptions about their behaviour. The labels people use change over time, and the definitions of them blur and shift. I have discussed this issue with many, many, friends who fall under the queer umbrella, and while not all of them are comfortable with "queer" as a personal label because of how it's been used against them in the past, there is near-unanimity from them that it's the correct word to use in this situation. Anyway, now that that rather lengthy set of disclaimers is over, let's get into the story proper, as we look at "White Light, White Heat" by the Velvet Underground: [Excerpt: The Velvet Underground, "White Light, White Heat"] And that look will start with... a disclaimer about length. This episode is going to be a long one. Not as long as episode one hundred and fifty, but almost certainly the longest episode I'll do this year, by some way. And there's a reason for that. One of the questions I've been asked repeatedly over the years about the podcast is why almost all the acts I've covered have been extremely commercially successful ones. "Where are the underground bands? The alternative bands? The little niche acts?" The answer to that is simple. Until the mid-sixties, the idea of an underground or alternative band made no sense at all in rock, pop, rock and roll, R&B, or soul. The idea would have been completely counterintuitive to the vast majority of the people we've discussed in the podcast. Those musics were commercial musics, made by people who wanted to make money and to  get the largest audiences possible. That doesn't mean that they had no artistic merit, or that there was no artistic intent behind them, but the artists making that music were *commercial* artists. They knew if they wanted to make another record, they had to sell enough copies of the last record for the record company to make another, and that if they wanted to keep eating, they had to draw enough of an audience to their gigs for promoters to keep booking them. There was no space in this worldview for what we might think of as cult success. If your record only sold a thousand copies, then you had failed in your goal, even if the thousand people who bought your record really loved it. Even less commercially successful artists we've covered to this point, like the Mothers of Invention or Love, were *trying* for commercial success, even if they made the decision not to compromise as much as others do. This started to change a tiny bit in the mid-sixties as the influence of jazz and folk in the US, and the British blues scene, started to be felt in rock music. But this influence, at first, was a one-way thing -- people who had been in the folk and jazz worlds deciding to modify their music to be more commercial. And that was followed by already massively commercial musicians, like the Beatles, taking on some of those influences and bringing their audience with them. But that started to change around the time that "rock" started to differentiate itself from "rock and roll" and "pop", in mid 1967. So in this episode and the next, we're going to look at two bands who in different ways provided a model for how to be an alternative band. Both of them still *wanted* commercial success, but neither achieved it, at least not at first and not in the conventional way. And both, when they started out, went by the name The Warlocks. But we have to take a rather circuitous route to get to this week's band, because we're now properly introducing a strand of music that has been there in the background for a while -- avant-garde art music. So before we go any further, let's have a listen to a thirty-second clip of the most famous piece of avant-garde music ever, and I'll be performing it myself: [Excerpt, Andrew Hickey "4'33 (Cage)"] Obviously that won't give the full effect, you have to listen to the whole piece to get that. That is of course a section of "4'33" by John Cage, a piece of music that is often incorrectly described as being four minutes and thirty three seconds of silence. As I've mentioned before, though, in the episode on "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag", it isn't that at all. The whole point of the piece is that there is no such thing as silence, and it's intended to make the listener appreciate all the normal ambient sounds as music, every bit as much as any piece by Bach or Beethoven. John Cage, the composer of "4'33", is possibly the single most influential avant-garde artist of the mid twentieth century, so as we're properly introducing the ideas of avant-garde music into the story here, we need to talk about him a little. Cage was, from an early age, torn between three great vocations, all of which in some fashion would shape his work for decades to come. One of these was architecture, and for a time he intended to become an architect. Another was the religious ministry, and he very seriously considered becoming a minister as a young man, and religion -- though not the religious faith of his youth -- was to be a massive factor in his work as he grew older. He started studying music from an early age, though he never had any facility as a performer -- though he did, when he discovered the work of Grieg, think that might change. He later said “For a while I played nothing else. I even imagined devoting my life to the performance of his works alone, for they did not seem to me to be too difficult, and I loved them.” [Excerpt: Grieg piano concerto in A minor] But he soon realised that he didn't have some of the basic skills that would be required to be a performer -- he never actually thought of himself as very musical -- and so he decided to move into composition, and he later talked about putting his musical limits to good use in being more inventive. From his very first pieces, Cage was trying to expand the definition of what a performance of a piece of music actually was. One of his friends, Harry Hay, who took part in the first documented performance of a piece by Cage, described how Cage's father, an inventor, had "devised a fluorescent light source over which Sample" -- Don Sample, Cage's boyfriend at the time -- "laid a piece of vellum painted with designs in oils. The blankets I was wearing were white, and a sort of lampshade shone coloured patterns onto me. It looked very good. The thing got so hot the designs began to run, but that only made it better.” Apparently the audience for this light show -- one that predated the light shows used by rock bands by a good thirty years -- were not impressed, though that may be more because the Santa Monica Women's Club in the early 1930s was not the vanguard of the avant-garde. Or maybe it was. Certainly the housewives of Santa Monica seemed more willing than one might expect to sign up for another of Cage's ideas. In 1933 he went door to door asking women if they would be interested in signing up to a lecture course from him on modern art and music. He told them that if they signed up for $2.50, he would give them ten lectures, and somewhere between twenty and forty of them signed up, even though, as he said later, “I explained to the housewives that I didn't know anything about either subject but that I was enthusiastic about both of them. I promised to learn faithfully enough about each subject so as to be able to give a talk an hour long each week.” And he did just that, going to the library every day and spending all week preparing an hour-long talk for them. History does not relate whether he ended these lectures by telling the housewives to tell just one friend about them. He said later “I came out of these lectures, with a devotion to the painting of Mondrian, on the one hand, and the music of Schoenberg on the other.” [Excerpt: Schoenberg, "Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte"] Schoenberg was one of the two most widely-respected composers in the world at that point, the other being Stravinsky, but the two had very different attitudes to composition. Schoenberg's great innovation was the creation and popularisation of the twelve-tone technique, and I should probably explain that a little before I go any further. Most Western music is based on an eight-note scale -- do, re, mi, fa, so, la, ti, do -- with the eighth note being an octave up from the first. So in the key of C major that would be C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C: [demonstrates] And when you hear notes from that scale, if your ears are accustomed to basically any Western music written before about 1920, or any Western popular music written since then, you expect the melody to lead back to C, and you know to expect that because it only uses those notes -- there are differing intervals between them, some having a tone between them and some having a semitone, and you recognise the pattern. But of course there are other notes between the notes of that scale. There are actually an infinite number of these, but in conventional Western music we only look at a few more -- C# (or D flat), D# (or E flat), F# (or G flat), G# (or A flat) and A# (or B flat). If you add in all those notes you get this: [demonstrates] There's no clear beginning or end, no do for it to come back to. And Schoenberg's great innovation, which he was only starting to promote widely around this time, was to insist that all twelve notes should be equal -- his melodies would use all twelve of the notes the exact same number of times, and so if he used say a B flat, he would have to use all eleven other notes before he used B flat again in the piece. This was a radical new idea, but Schoenberg had only started advancing it after first winning great acclaim for earlier pieces, like his "Three Pieces for Piano", a work which wasn't properly twelve-tone, but did try to do without the idea of having any one note be more important than any other: [Excerpt: Schoenberg, "Three Pieces for Piano"] At this point, that work had only been performed in the US by one performer, Richard Buhlig, and hadn't been released as a recording yet. Cage was so eager to hear it that he'd found Buhlig's phone number and called him, asking him to play the piece, but Buhlig put the phone down on him. Now he was doing these lectures, though, he had to do one on Schoenberg, and he wasn't a competent enough pianist to play Schoenberg's pieces himself, and there were still no recordings of them. Cage hitch-hiked from Santa Monica to LA, where Buhlig lived, to try to get him to come and visit his class and play some of Schoenberg's pieces for them. Buhlig wasn't in, and Cage hung around in his garden hoping for him to come back -- he pulled the leaves off a bough from one of Buhlig's trees, going "He'll come back, he won't come back, he'll come back..." and the leaves said he'd be back. Buhlig arrived back at midnight, and quite understandably told the strange twenty-one-year-old who'd spent twelve hours in his garden pulling the leaves off his trees that no, he would not come to Santa Monica and give a free performance. But he did agree that if Cage brought some of his own compositions he'd give them a look over. Buhlig started giving Cage some proper lessons in composition, although he stressed that he was a performer, not a composer. Around this time Cage wrote his Sonata for Clarinet: [Excerpt: John Cage, "Sonata For Clarinet"] Buhlig suggested that Cage send that to Henry Cowell, the composer we heard about in the episode on "Good Vibrations" who was friends with Lev Termen and who created music by playing the strings inside a piano: [Excerpt: Henry Cowell, "Aeolian Harp and Sinister Resonance"] Cowell offered to take Cage on as an assistant, in return for which Cowell would teach him for a semester, as would Adolph Weiss, a pupil of Schoenberg's. But the goal, which Cowell suggested, was always to have Cage study with Schoenberg himself. Schoenberg at first refused, saying that Cage couldn't afford his price, but eventually took Cage on as a student having been assured that he would devote his entire life to music -- a promise Cage kept. Cage started writing pieces for percussion, something that had been very rare up to that point -- only a handful of composers, most notably Edgard Varese, had written pieces for percussion alone, but Cage was: [Excerpt: John Cage, "Trio"] This is often portrayed as a break from the ideals of his teacher Schoenberg, but in fact there's a clear continuity there, once you see what Cage was taking from Schoenberg. Schoenberg's work is, in some senses, about equality, about all notes being equal. Or to put it another way, it's about fairness. About erasing arbitrary distinctions. What Cage was doing was erasing the arbitrary distinction between the more and less prominent instruments. Why should there be pieces for solo violin or string quartet, but not for multiple percussion players? That said, Schoenberg was not exactly the most encouraging of teachers. When Cage invited Schoenberg to go to a concert of Cage's percussion work, Schoenberg told him he was busy that night. When Cage offered to arrange another concert for a date Schoenberg wasn't busy, the reply came "No, I will not be free at any time". Despite this, Cage later said “Schoenberg was a magnificent teacher, who always gave the impression that he was putting us in touch with musical principles,” and said "I literally worshipped him" -- a strong statement from someone who took religious matters as seriously as Cage. Cage was so devoted to Schoenberg's music that when a concert of music by Stravinsky was promoted as "music of the world's greatest living composer", Cage stormed into the promoter's office angrily, confronting the promoter and making it very clear that such things should not be said in the city where Schoenberg lived. Schoenberg clearly didn't think much of Cage's attempts at composition, thinking -- correctly -- that Cage had no ear for harmony. And his reportedly aggressive and confrontational teaching style didn't sit well with Cage -- though it seems very similar to a lot of the teaching techniques of the Zen masters he would later go on to respect. The two eventually parted ways, although Cage always spoke highly of Schoenberg. Schoenberg later gave Cage a compliment of sorts, when asked if any of his students had gone on to do anything interesting. At first he replied that none had, but then he mentioned Cage and said “Of course he's not a composer, but an inventor—of genius.” Cage was at this point very worried if there was any point to being a composer at all. He said later “I'd read Cowell's New Musical Resources and . . . The Theory of Rhythm. I had also read Chavez's Towards a New Music. Both works gave me the feeling that everything that was possible in music had already happened. So I thought I could never compose socially important music. Only if I could invent something new, then would I be useful to society. But that seemed unlikely then.” [Excerpt: John Cage, "Totem Ancestor"] Part of the solution came when he was asked to compose music for an abstract animation by the filmmaker Oskar Fischinger, and also to work as Fischinger's assistant when making the film. He was fascinated by the stop-motion process, and by the results of the film, which he described as "a beautiful film in which these squares, triangles and circles and other things moved and changed colour.” But more than that he was overwhelmed by a comment by Fischinger, who told him “Everything in the world has its own spirit, and this spirit becomes audible by setting it into vibration.” Cage later said “That set me on fire. He started me on a path of exploration of the world around me which has never stopped—of hitting and stretching and scraping and rubbing everything.” Cage now took his ideas further. His compositions for percussion had been about, if you like, giving the underdog a chance -- percussion was always in the background, why should it not be in the spotlight? Now he realised that there were other things getting excluded in conventional music -- the sounds that we characterise as noise. Why should composers work to exclude those sounds, but work to *include* other sounds? Surely that was... well, a little unfair? Eventually this would lead to pieces like his 1952 piece "Water Music", later expanded and retitled "Water Walk", which can be heard here in his 1959 appearance on the TV show "I've Got a Secret".  It's a piece for, amongst other things, a flowerpot full of flowers, a bathtub, a watering can, a pipe, a duck call, a blender full of ice cubes, and five unplugged radios: [Excerpt: John Cage "Water Walk"] As he was now avoiding pitch and harmony as organising principles for his music, he turned to time. But note -- not to rhythm. He said “There's none of this boom, boom, boom, business in my music . . . a measure is taken as a strict measure of time—not a one two three four—which I fill with various sounds.” He came up with a system he referred to as “micro-macrocosmic rhythmic structure,” what we would now call fractals, though that word hadn't yet been invented, where the structure of the whole piece was reflected in the smallest part of it. For a time he started moving away from the term music, preferring to refer to the "art of noise" or to "organised sound" -- though he later received a telegram from Edgard Varese, one of his musical heroes and one of the few other people writing works purely for percussion, asking him not to use that phrase, which Varese used for his own work. After meeting with Varese and his wife, he later became convinced that it was Varese's wife who had initiated the telegram, as she explained to Cage's wife "we didn't want your husband's work confused with my husband's work, any more than you'd want some . . . any artist's work confused with that of a cartoonist.” While there is a humour to Cage's work, I don't really hear much qualitative difference between a Cage piece like the one we just heard and a Varese piece like Ionisation: [Excerpt: Edgard Varese, "Ionisation"] But it was in 1952, the year of "Water Music" that John Cage made his two biggest impacts on the cultural world, though the full force of those impacts wasn't felt for some years. To understand Cage's 1952 work, you first have to understand that he had become heavily influenced by Zen, which at that time was very little known in the Western world. Indeed he had studied with Daisetsu Suzuki, who is credited with introducing Zen to the West, and said later “I didn't study music with just anybody; I studied with Schoenberg, I didn't study Zen with just anybody; I studied with Suzuki. I've always gone, insofar as I could, to the president of the company.” Cage's whole worldview was profoundly affected by Zen, but he was also naturally sympathetic to it, and his work after learning about Zen is mostly a continuation of trends we can already see. In particular, he became convinced that the point of music isn't to communicate anything between two people, rather its point is merely to be experienced. I'm far from an expert on Buddhism, but one way of thinking about its central lessons is that one should experience things as they are, experiencing the thing itself rather than one's thoughts or preconceptions about it. And so at Black Mountain college came Theatre Piece Number 1: [Excerpt: Edith Piaf, "La Vie En Rose" ] In this piece, Cage had set the audience on all sides, so they'd be facing each other. He stood on a stepladder, as colleagues danced in and around the audience, another colleague played the piano, two more took turns to stand on another stepladder to recite poetry, different films and slides were projected, seemingly at random, onto the walls, and the painter Robert Rauschenberg played scratchy Edith Piaf records on a wind-up gramophone. The audience were included in the performance, and it was meant to be experienced as a gestalt, as a whole, to be what we would now call an immersive experience. One of Cage's students around this time was the artist Allan Kaprow, and he would be inspired by Theatre Piece Number 1 to put on several similar events in the late fifties. Those events he called "happenings", because the point of them was that you were meant to experience an event as it was happening rather than bring preconceptions of form and structure to them. Those happenings were the inspiration for events like The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream, and the term "happening" became such an integral part of the counterculture that by 1967 there were comedy films being released about them, including one just called The Happening with a title track by the Supremes that made number one: [Excerpt: The Supremes, "The Happening"] Theatre Piece Number 1 was retrospectively considered the first happening, and as such its influence is incalculable. But one part I didn't mention about Theatre Piece Number 1 is that as well as Rauschenberg playing Edith Piaf's records, he also displayed some of his paintings. These paintings were totally white -- at a glance, they looked like blank canvases, but as one inspected them more clearly, it became apparent that Rauschenberg had painted them with white paint, with visible brushstrokes. These paintings, along with a visit to an anechoic chamber in which Cage discovered that even in total silence one can still hear one's own blood and nervous system, so will never experience total silence, were the final key to something Cage had been working towards -- if music had minimised percussion, and excluded noise, how much more had it excluded silence? As Cage said in 1958 “Curiously enough, the twelve-tone system has no zero in it.” And so came 4'33, the piece that we heard an excerpt of near the start of this episode. That piece was the something new he'd been looking for that could be useful to society. It took the sounds the audience could already hear, and without changing them even slightly gave them a new context and made the audience hear them as they were. Simply by saying "this is music", it caused the ambient noise to be perceived as music. This idea, of recontextualising existing material, was one that had already been done in the art world -- Marcel Duchamp, in 1917, had exhibited a urinal as a sculpture titled "Fountain" -- but even Duchamp had talked about his work as "everyday objects raised to the dignity of a work of art by the artist's act of choice". The artist was *raising* the object to art. What Cage was saying was "the object is already art". This was all massively influential to a young painter who had seen Cage give lectures many times, and while at art school had with friends prepared a piano in the same way Cage did for his own experimental compositions, dampening the strings with different objects. [Excerpt: Dana Gillespie, "Andy Warhol (live)"] Duchamp and Rauschenberg were both big influences on Andy Warhol, but he would say in the early sixties "John Cage is really so responsible for so much that's going on," and would for the rest of his life cite Cage as one of the two or three prime influences of his career. Warhol is a difficult figure to discuss, because his work is very intellectual but he was not very articulate -- which is one reason I've led up to him by discussing Cage in such detail, because Cage was always eager to talk at great length about the theoretical basis of his work, while Warhol would say very few words about anything at all. Probably the person who knew him best was his business partner and collaborator Paul Morrissey, and Morrissey's descriptions of Warhol have shaped my own view of his life, but it's very worth noting that Morrissey is an extremely right-wing moralist who wishes to see a Catholic theocracy imposed to do away with the scourges of sexual immorality, drug use, hedonism, and liberalism, so his view of Warhol, a queer drug using progressive whose worldview seems to have been totally opposed to Morrissey's in every way, might be a little distorted. Warhol came from an impoverished background, and so, as many people who grew up poor do, he was, throughout his life, very eager to make money. He studied art at university, and got decent but not exceptional grades -- he was a competent draughtsman, but not a great one, and most importantly as far as success in the art world goes he didn't have what is known as his own "line" -- with most successful artists, you can look at a handful of lines they've drawn and see something of their own personality in it. You couldn't with Warhol. His drawings looked like mediocre imitations of other people's work. Perfectly competent, but nothing that stood out. So Warhol came up with a technique to make his drawings stand out -- blotting. He would do a normal drawing, then go over it with a lot of wet ink. He'd lower a piece of paper on to the wet drawing, and the new paper would soak up the ink, and that second piece of paper would become the finished work. The lines would be fractured and smeared, broken in places where the ink didn't get picked up, and thick in others where it had pooled. With this mechanical process, Warhol had managed to create an individual style, and he became an extremely successful commercial artist. In the early 1950s photography was still seen as a somewhat low-class way of advertising things. If you wanted to sell to a rich audience, you needed to use drawings or paintings. By 1955 Warhol was making about twelve thousand dollars a year -- somewhere close to a hundred and thirty thousand a year in today's money -- drawing shoes for advertisements. He also had a sideline in doing record covers for people like Count Basie: [Excerpt: Count Basie, "Seventh Avenue Express"] For most of the 1950s he also tried to put on shows of his more serious artistic work -- often with homoerotic themes -- but to little success. The dominant art style of the time was the abstract expressionism of people like Jackson Pollock, whose art was visceral, emotional, and macho. The term "action paintings" which was coined for the work of people like Pollock, sums it up. This was manly art for manly men having manly emotions and expressing them loudly. It was very male and very straight, and even the gay artists who were prominent at the time tended to be very conformist and look down on anything they considered flamboyant or effeminate. Warhol was a rather effeminate, very reserved man, who strongly disliked showing his emotions, and whose tastes ran firmly to the camp. Camp as an aesthetic of finding joy in the flamboyant or trashy, as opposed to merely a descriptive term for men who behaved in a way considered effeminate, was only just starting to be codified at this time -- it wouldn't really become a fully-formed recognisable thing until Susan Sontag's essay "Notes on Camp" in 1964 -- but of course just because something hasn't been recognised doesn't mean it doesn't exist, and Warhol's aesthetic was always very camp, and in the 1950s in the US that was frowned upon even in gay culture, where the mainstream opinion was that the best way to acceptance was through assimilation. Abstract expressionism was all about expressing the self, and that was something Warhol never wanted to do -- in fact he made some pronouncements at times which suggested he didn't think of himself as *having* a self in the conventional sense. The combination of not wanting to express himself and of wanting to work more efficiently as a commercial artist led to some interesting results. For example, he was commissioned in 1957 to do a cover for an album by Moondog, the blind street musician whose name Alan Freed had once stolen: [Excerpt: Moondog, "Gloving It"] For that cover, Warhol got his mother, Julia Warhola, to just write out the liner notes for the album in her rather ornamental cursive script, and that became the front cover, leading to an award for graphic design going that year to "Andy Warhol's mother". (Incidentally, my copy of the current CD issue of that album, complete with Julia Warhola's cover, is put out by Pickwick Records...) But towards the end of the fifties, the work for commercial artists started to dry up. If you wanted to advertise shoes, now, you just took a photo of the shoes rather than get Andy Warhol to draw a picture of them. The money started to disappear, and Warhol started to panic. If there was no room for him in graphic design any more, he had to make his living in the fine arts, which he'd been totally unsuccessful in. But luckily for Warhol, there was a new movement that was starting to form -- Pop Art. Pop Art started in England, and had originally been intended, at least in part, as a critique of American consumerist capitalism. Pieces like "Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing?" by Richard Hamilton (who went on to design the Beatles' White Album cover) are collages of found images, almost all from American sources, recontextualised and juxtaposed in interesting ways, so a bodybuilder poses in a room that's taken from an advert in Ladies' Home Journal, while on the wall, instead of a painting, hangs a blown-up cover of a Jack Kirby romance comic. Pop Art changed slightly when it got taken up in America, and there it became something rather different, something closer to Duchamp, taking those found images and displaying them as art with no juxtaposition. Where Richard Hamilton created collage art which *showed* a comic cover by Jack Kirby as a painting in the background, Roy Lichtenstein would take a panel of comic art by Kirby, or Russ Heath or Irv Novick or a dozen other comic artists, and redraw it at the size of a normal painting. So Warhol took Cage's idea that the object is already art, and brought that into painting, starting by doing paintings of Campbell's soup cans, in which he tried as far as possible to make the cans look exactly like actual soup cans. The paintings were controversial, inciting fury in some and laughter in others and causing almost everyone to question whether they were art. Warhol would embrace an aesthetic in which things considered unimportant or trash or pop culture detritus were the greatest art of all. For example pretty much every profile of him written in the mid sixties talks about him obsessively playing "Sally Go Round the Roses", a girl-group single by the one-hit wonders the Jaynettes: [Excerpt: The Jaynettes, "Sally Go Round the Roses"] After his paintings of Campbell's soup cans, and some rather controversial but less commercially successful paintings of photographs of horrors and catastrophes taken from newspapers, Warhol abandoned painting in the conventional sense altogether, instead creating brightly coloured screen prints -- a form of stencilling -- based on photographs of celebrities like Elvis Presley, Elizabeth Taylor and, most famously, Marilyn Monroe. That way he could produce images which could be mass-produced, without his active involvement, and which supposedly had none of his personality in them, though of course his personality pervades the work anyway. He put on exhibitions of wooden boxes, silk-screen printed to look exactly like shipping cartons of Brillo pads. Images we see everywhere -- in newspapers, in supermarkets -- were art. And Warhol even briefly formed a band. The Druds were a garage band formed to play at a show at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art, the opening night of an exhibition that featured a silkscreen by Warhol of 210 identical bottles of Coca-Cola, as well as paintings by Rauschenberg and others. That opening night featured a happening by Claes Oldenburg, and a performance by Cage -- Cage gave a live lecture while three recordings of his own voice also played. The Druds were also meant to perform, but they fell apart after only a few rehearsals. Some recordings apparently exist, but they don't seem to circulate, but they'd be fascinating to hear as almost the entire band were non-musician artists like Warhol, Jasper Johns, and the sculptor Walter de Maria. Warhol said of the group “It didn't go too well, but if we had just stayed on it it would have been great.” On the other hand, the one actual musician in the group said “It was kind of ridiculous, so I quit after the second rehearsal". That musician was La Monte Young: [Excerpt: La Monte Young, "The Well-Tuned Piano"] That's an excerpt from what is generally considered Young's masterwork, "The Well-Tuned Piano". It's six and a half hours long. If Warhol is a difficult figure to write about, Young is almost impossible. He's a musician with a career stretching sixty years, who is arguably the most influential musician from the classical tradition in that time period. He's generally considered the father of minimalism, and he's also been called by Brian Eno "the daddy of us all" -- without Young you simply *do not* get art rock at all. Without Young there is no Velvet Underground, no David Bowie, no Eno, no New York punk scene, no Yoko Ono. Anywhere that the fine arts or conceptual art have intersected with popular music in the last fifty or more years has been influenced in one way or another by Young's work. BUT... he only rarely publishes his scores. He very, very rarely allows recordings of his work to be released -- there are four recordings on his bandcamp, plus a handful of recordings of his older, published, pieces, and very little else. He doesn't allow his music to be performed live without his supervision. There *are* bootleg recordings of his music, but even those are not easily obtainable -- Young is vigorous in enforcing his copyrights and issues takedown notices against anywhere that hosts them. So other than that handful of legitimately available recordings -- plus a recording by Young's Theater of Eternal Music, the legality of which is still disputed, and an off-air recording of a 1971 radio programme I've managed to track down, the only way to experience Young's music unless you're willing to travel to one of his rare live performances or installations is second-hand, by reading about it. Except that the one book that deals solely with Young and his music is not only a dense and difficult book to read, it's also one that Young vehemently disagreed with and considered extremely inaccurate, to the point he refused to allow permissions to quote his work in the book. Young did apparently prepare a list of corrections for the book, but he wouldn't tell the author what they were without payment. So please assume that anything I say about Young is wrong, but also accept that the short section of this episode about Young has required more work to *try* to get it right than pretty much anything else this year. Young's musical career actually started out in a relatively straightforward manner. He didn't grow up in the most loving of homes -- he's talked about his father beating him as a child because he had been told that young La Monte was clever -- but his father did buy him a saxophone and teach him the rudiments of the instrument, and as a child he was most influenced by the music of the big band saxophone player Jimmy Dorsey: [Excerpt: Jimmy Dorsey, “It's the Dreamer in Me”] The family, who were Mormon farmers, relocated several times in Young's childhood, from Idaho first to California and then to Utah, but everywhere they went La Monte seemed to find musical inspiration, whether from an uncle who had been part of the Kansas City jazz scene, a classmate who was a musical prodigy who had played with Perez Prado in his early teens, or a teacher who took the class to see a performance of Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra: [Excerpt: Bartok, "Concerto for Orchestra"] After leaving high school, Young went to Los Angeles City College to study music under Leonard Stein, who had been Schoenberg's assistant when Schoenberg had taught at UCLA, and there he became part of the thriving jazz scene based around Central Avenue, studying and performing with musicians like Ornette Coleman, Don Cherry, and Eric Dolphy -- Young once beat Dolphy in an audition for a place in the City College dance band, and the two would apparently substitute for each other on their regular gigs when one couldn't make it. During this time, Young's musical tastes became much more adventurous. He was a particular fan of the work of John Coltrane, and also got inspired by City of Glass, an album by Stan Kenton that attempted to combine jazz and modern classical music: [Excerpt: Stan Kenton's Innovations Orchestra, "City of Glass: The Structures"] His other major musical discovery in the mid-fifties was one we've talked about on several previous occasions -- the album Music of India, Morning and Evening Ragas by Ali Akhbar Khan: [Excerpt: Ali Akhbar Khan, "Rag Sindhi Bhairavi"] Young's music at this point was becoming increasingly modal, and equally influenced by the blues and Indian music. But he was also becoming interested in serialism. Serialism is an extension and generalisation of twelve-tone music, inspired by mathematical set theory. In serialism, you choose a set of musical elements -- in twelve-tone music that's the twelve notes in the twelve-tone scale, but it can also be a set of tonal relations, a chord, or any other set of elements. You then define all the possible ways you can permute those elements, a defined set of operations you can perform on them -- so you could play a scale forwards, play it backwards, play all the notes in the scale simultaneously, and so on. You then go through all the possible permutations, exactly once, and that's your piece of music. Young was particularly influenced by the works of Anton Webern, one of the earliest serialists: [Excerpt: Anton Webern, "Cantata number 1 for Soprano, Mixed Chorus, and Orchestra"] That piece we just heard, Webern's "Cantata number 1", was the subject of some of the earliest theoretical discussion of serialism, and in particular led to some discussion of the next step on from serialism. If serialism was all about going through every single permutation of a set, what if you *didn't* permute every element? There was a lot of discussion in the late fifties in music-theoretical circles about the idea of invariance. Normally in music, the interesting thing is what gets changed. To use a very simple example, you might change a melody from a major key to a minor one to make it sound sadder. What theorists at this point were starting to discuss is what happens if you leave something the same, but change the surrounding context, so the thing you *don't* vary sounds different because of the changed context. And going further, what if you don't change the context at all, and merely *imply* a changed context? These ideas were some of those which inspired Young's first major work, his Trio For Strings from 1958, a complex, palindromic, serial piece which is now credited as the first work of minimalism, because the notes in it change so infrequently: [Excerpt: La Monte Young, "Trio for Strings"] Though I should point out that Young never considers his works truly finished, and constantly rewrites them, and what we just heard is an excerpt from the only recording of the trio ever officially released, which is of the 2015 version. So I can't state for certain how close what we just heard is to the piece he wrote in 1958, except that it sounds very like the written descriptions of it I've read. After writing the Trio For Strings, Young moved to Germany to study with the modernist composer Karlheinz Stockhausen. While studying with Stockhausen, he became interested in the work of John Cage, and started up a correspondence with Cage. On his return to New York he studied with Cage and started writing pieces inspired by Cage, of which the most musical is probably Composition 1960 #7: [Excerpt: La Monte Young, "Composition 1960 #7"] The score for that piece is a stave on which is drawn a treble clef, the notes B and F#, and the words "To be held for a long Time". Other of his compositions from 1960 -- which are among the few of his compositions which have been published -- include composition 1960 #10 ("To Bob Morris"), the score for which is just the instruction "Draw a straight line and follow it.", and Piano Piece for David  Tudor #1, the score for which reads "Bring a bale of hay and a bucket of water onto the stage for the piano to eat and drink. The performer may then feed the piano or leave it to eat by itself. If the former, the piece is over after the piano has been fed. If the latter, it is over after the piano eats or decides not to". Most of these compositions were performed as part of a loose New York art collective called Fluxus, all of whom were influenced by Cage and the Dadaists. This collective, led by George Maciunas, sometimes involved Cage himself, but also involved people like Henry Flynt, the inventor of conceptual art, who later became a campaigner against art itself, and who also much to Young's bemusement abandoned abstract music in the mid-sixties to form a garage band with Walter de Maria (who had played drums with the Druds): [Excerpt: Henry Flynt and the Insurrections, "I Don't Wanna"] Much of Young's work was performed at Fluxus concerts given in a New York loft belonging to another member of the collective, Yoko Ono, who co-curated the concerts with Young. One of Ono's mid-sixties pieces, her "Four Pieces for Orchestra" is dedicated to Young, and consists of such instructions as "Count all the stars of that night by heart. The piece ends when all the orchestra members finish counting the stars, or when it dawns. This can be done with windows instead of stars." But while these conceptual ideas remained a huge part of Young's thinking, he soon became interested in two other ideas. The first was the idea of just intonation -- tuning instruments and voices to perfect harmonics, rather than using the subtly-off tuning that is used in Western music. I'm sure I've explained that before in a previous episode, but to put it simply when you're tuning an instrument with fixed pitches like a piano, you have a choice -- you can either tune it so that the notes in one key are perfectly in tune with each other, but then when you change key things go very out of tune, or you can choose to make *everything* a tiny bit, almost unnoticeably, out of tune, but equally so. For the last several hundred years, musicians as a community have chosen the latter course, which was among other things promoted by Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier, a collection of compositions which shows how the different keys work together: [Excerpt: Bach (Glenn Gould), "The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II: Fugue in F-sharp minor, BWV 883"] Young, by contrast, has his own esoteric tuning system, which he uses in his own work The Well-Tuned Piano: [Excerpt: La Monte Young, "The Well-Tuned Piano"] The other idea that Young took on was from Indian music, the idea of the drone. One of the four recordings of Young's music that is available from his Bandcamp, a 1982 recording titled The Tamburas of Pandit Pran Nath, consists of one hour, thirteen minutes, and fifty-eight seconds of this: [Excerpt: La Monte Young, "The Tamburas of Pandit Pran Nath"] Yes, I have listened to the whole piece. No, nothing else happens. The minimalist composer Terry Riley describes the recording as "a singularly rare contribution that far outshines any other attempts to capture this instrument in recorded media". In 1962, Young started writing pieces based on what he called the "dream chord", a chord consisting of a root, fourth, sharpened fourth, and fifth: [dream chord] That chord had already appeared in his Trio for Strings, but now it would become the focus of much of his work, in pieces like his 1962 piece The Second Dream of the High-Tension Line Stepdown Transformer, heard here in a 1982 revision: [Excerpt: La Monte Young, "The Second Dream of the High-Tension Line Stepdown Transformer"] That was part of a series of works titled The Four Dreams of China, and Young began to plan an installation work titled Dream House, which would eventually be created, and which currently exists in Tribeca, New York, where it's been in continuous "performance" for thirty years -- and which consists of thirty-two different pure sine wave tones all played continuously, plus purple lighting by Young's wife Marian Zazeela. But as an initial step towards creating this, Young formed a collective called Theatre of Eternal Music, which some of the members -- though never Young himself -- always claim also went by the alternative name The Dream Syndicate. According to John Cale, a member of the group, that name came about because the group tuned their instruments to the 60hz hum of the fridge in Young's apartment, which Cale called "the key of Western civilisation". According to Cale, that meant the fundamental of the chords they played was 10hz, the frequency of alpha waves when dreaming -- hence the name. The group initially consisted of Young, Zazeela, the photographer Billy Name, and percussionist Angus MacLise, but by this recording in 1964 the lineup was Young, Zazeela, MacLise, Tony Conrad and John Cale: [Excerpt: "Cale, Conrad, Maclise, Young, Zazeela - The Dream Syndicate 2 IV 64-4"] That recording, like any others that have leaked by the 1960s version of the Theatre of Eternal Music or Dream Syndicate, is of disputed legality, because Young and Zazeela claim to this day that what the group performed were La Monte Young's compositions, while the other two surviving members, Cale and Conrad, claim that their performances were improvisational collaborations and should be equally credited to all the members, and so there have been lawsuits and countersuits any time anyone has released the recordings. John Cale, the youngest member of the group, was also the only one who wasn't American. He'd been born in Wales in 1942, and had had the kind of childhood that, in retrospect, seems guaranteed to lead to eccentricity. He was the product of a mixed-language marriage -- his father, William, was an English speaker while his mother, Margaret, spoke Welsh, but the couple had moved in on their marriage with Margaret's mother, who insisted that only Welsh could be spoken in her house. William didn't speak Welsh, and while he eventually picked up the basics from spending all his life surrounded by Welsh-speakers, he refused on principle to capitulate to his mother-in-law, and so remained silent in the house. John, meanwhile, grew up a monolingual Welsh speaker, and didn't start to learn English until he went to school when he was seven, and so couldn't speak to his father until then even though they lived together. Young John was extremely unwell for most of his childhood, both physically -- he had bronchial problems for which he had to take a cough mixture that was largely opium to help him sleep at night -- and mentally. He was hospitalised when he was sixteen with what was at first thought to be meningitis, but turned out to be a psychosomatic condition, the result of what he has described as a nervous breakdown. That breakdown is probably connected to the fact that during his teenage years he was sexually assaulted by two adults in positions of authority -- a vicar and a music teacher -- and felt unable to talk to anyone about this. He was, though, a child prodigy and was playing viola with the National Youth Orchestra of Wales from the age of thirteen, and listening to music by Schoenberg, Webern, and Stravinsky. He was so talented a multi-instrumentalist that at school he was the only person other than one of the music teachers and the headmaster who was allowed to use the piano -- which led to a prank on his very last day at school. The headmaster would, on the last day, hit a low G on the piano to cue the assembly to stand up, and Cale had placed a comb on the string, muting it and stopping the note from sounding -- in much the same way that his near-namesake John Cage was "preparing" pianos for his own compositions in the USA. Cale went on to Goldsmith's College to study music and composition, under Humphrey Searle, one of Britain's greatest proponents of serialism who had himself studied under Webern. Cale's main instrument was the viola, but he insisted on also playing pieces written for the violin, because they required more technical skill. For his final exam he chose to play Hindemith's notoriously difficult Viola Sonata: [Excerpt: Hindemith Viola Sonata] While at Goldsmith's, Cale became friendly with Cornelius Cardew, a composer and cellist who had studied with Stockhausen and at the time was a great admirer of and advocate for the works of Cage and Young (though by the mid-seventies Cardew rejected their work as counter-revolutionary bourgeois imperialism). Through Cardew, Cale started to correspond with Cage, and with George Maciunas and other members of Fluxus. In July 1963, just after he'd finished his studies at Goldsmith's, Cale presented a festival there consisting of an afternoon and an evening show. These shows included the first British performances of several works including Cardew's Autumn '60 for Orchestra -- a piece in which the musicians were given blank staves on which to write whatever part they wanted to play, but a separate set of instructions in *how* to play the parts they'd written. Another piece Cale presented in its British premiere at that show was Cage's "Concerto for Piano and Orchestra": [Excerpt: John Cage, "Concerto for Piano and Orchestra"] In the evening show, they performed Two Pieces For String Quartet by George Brecht (in which the musicians polish their instruments with dusters, making scraping sounds as they clean them),  and two new pieces by Cale, one of which involved a plant being put on the stage, and then the performer, Robin Page, screaming from the balcony at the plant that it would die, then running down, through the audience, and onto the stage, screaming abuse and threats at the plant. The final piece in the show was a performance by Cale (the first one in Britain) of La Monte Young's "X For Henry Flynt". For this piece, Cale put his hands together and then smashed both his arms onto the keyboard as hard as he could, over and over. After five minutes some of the audience stormed the stage and tried to drag the piano away from him. Cale followed the piano on his knees, continuing to bang the keys, and eventually the audience gave up in defeat and Cale the performer won. After this Cale moved to the USA, to further study composition, this time with Iannis Xenakis, the modernist composer who had also taught Mickey Baker orchestration after Baker left Mickey and Sylvia, and who composed such works as "Orient Occident": [Excerpt: Iannis Xenakis, "Orient Occident"] Cale had been recommended to Xenakis as a student by Aaron Copland, who thought the young man was probably a genius. But Cale's musical ambitions were rather too great for Tanglewood, Massachusetts -- he discovered that the institute had eighty-eight pianos, the same number as there are keys on a piano keyboard, and thought it would be great if for a piece he could take all eighty-eight pianos, put them all on different boats, sail the boats out onto a lake, and have eighty-eight different musicians each play one note on each piano, while the boats sank with the pianos on board. For some reason, Cale wasn't allowed to perform this composition, and instead had to make do with one where he pulled an axe out of a single piano and slammed it down on a table. Hardly the same, I'm sure you'll agree. From Tanglewood, Cale moved on to New York, where he soon became part of the artistic circles surrounding John Cage and La Monte Young. It was at this time that he joined Young's Theatre of Eternal Music, and also took part in a performance with Cage that would get Cale his first television exposure: [Excerpt: John Cale playing Erik Satie's "Vexations" on "I've Got a Secret"] That's Cale playing through "Vexations", a piece by Erik Satie that wasn't published until after Satie's death, and that remained in obscurity until Cage popularised -- if that's the word -- the piece. The piece, which Cage had found while studying Satie's notes, seems to be written as an exercise and has the inscription (in French) "In order to play the motif 840 times in succession, it would be advisable to prepare oneself beforehand, and in the deepest silence, by serious immobilities." Cage interpreted that, possibly correctly, as an instruction that the piece should be played eight hundred and forty times straight through, and so he put together a performance of the piece, the first one ever, by a group he called the Pocket Theatre Piano Relay Team, which included Cage himself, Cale, Joshua Rifkin, and several other notable musical figures, who took it in turns playing the piece. For that performance, which ended up lasting eighteen hours, there was an entry fee of five dollars, and there was a time-clock in the lobby. Audience members punched in and punched out, and got a refund of five cents for every twenty minutes they'd spent listening to the music. Supposedly, at the end, one audience member yelled "Encore!" A week later, Cale appeared on "I've Got a Secret", a popular game-show in which celebrities tried to guess people's secrets (and which is where that performance of Cage's "Water Walk" we heard earlier comes from): [Excerpt: John Cale on I've Got a Secret] For a while, Cale lived with a friend of La Monte Young's, Terry Jennings, before moving in to a flat with Tony Conrad, one of the other members of the Theatre of Eternal Music. Angus MacLise lived in another flat in the same building. As there was not much money to be made in avant-garde music, Cale also worked in a bookshop -- a job Cage had found him -- and had a sideline in dealing drugs. But rents were so cheap at this time that Cale and Conrad only had to work part-time, and could spend much of their time working on the music they were making with Young. Both were string players -- Conrad violin, Cale viola -- and they soon modified their instruments. Conrad merely attached pickups to his so it could be amplified, but Cale went much further. He filed down the viola's bridge so he could play three strings at once, and he replaced the normal viola strings with thicker, heavier, guitar and mandolin strings. This created a sound so loud that it sounded like a distorted electric guitar -- though in late 1963 and early 1964 there were very few people who even knew what a distorted guitar sounded like. Cale and Conrad were also starting to become interested in rock and roll music, to which neither of them had previously paid much attention, because John Cage's music had taught them to listen for music in sounds they previously dismissed. In particular, Cale became fascinated with the harmonies of the Everly Brothers, hearing in them the same just intonation that Young advocated for: [Excerpt: The Everly Brothers, "All I Have to Do is Dream"] And it was with this newfound interest in rock and roll that Cale and Conrad suddenly found themselves members of a manufactured pop band. The two men had been invited to a party on the Lower East Side, and there they'd been introduced to Terry Phillips of Pickwick Records. Phillips had seen their long hair and asked if they were musicians, so they'd answered "yes". He asked if they were in a band, and they said yes. He asked if that band had a drummer, and again they said yes. By this point they realised that he had assumed they were rock guitarists, rather than experimental avant-garde string players, but they decided to play along and see where this was going. Phillips told them that if they brought along their drummer to Pickwick's studios the next day, he had a job for them. The two of them went along with Walter de Maria, who did play the drums a little in between his conceptual art work, and there they were played a record: [Excerpt: The Primitives, "The Ostrich"] It was explained to them that Pickwick made knock-off records -- soundalikes of big hits, and their own records in the style of those hits, all played by a bunch of session musicians and put out under different band names. This one, by "the Primitives", they thought had a shot at being an actual hit, even though it was a dance-craze song about a dance where one partner lays on the floor and the other stamps on their head. But if it was going to be a hit, they needed an actual band to go out and perform it, backing the singer. How would Cale, Conrad, and de Maria like to be three quarters of the Primitives? It sounded fun, but of course they weren't actually guitarists. But as it turned out, that wasn't going to be a problem. They were told that the guitars on the track had all been tuned to one note -- not even to an open chord, like we talked about Steve Cropper doing last episode, but all the strings to one note. Cale and Conrad were astonished -- that was exactly the kind of thing they'd been doing in their drone experiments with La Monte Young. Who was this person who was independently inventing the most advanced ideas in experimental music but applying them to pop songs? And that was how they met Lou Reed: [Excerpt: The Primitives, "The Ostrich"] Where Cale and Conrad were avant-gardeists who had only just started paying attention to rock and roll music, rock and roll was in Lou Reed's blood, but there were a few striking similarities between him and Cale, even though at a glance their backgrounds could not have seemed more different. Reed had been brought up in a comfortably middle-class home in Long Island, but despised the suburban conformity that surrounded him from a very early age, and by his teens was starting to rebel against it very strongly. According to one classmate “Lou was always more advanced than the rest of us. The drinking age was eighteen back then, so we all started drinking at around sixteen. We were drinking quarts of beer, but Lou was smoking joints. He didn't do that in front of many people, but I knew he was doing it. While we were looking at girls in Playboy, Lou was reading Story of O. He was reading the Marquis de Sade, stuff that I wouldn't even have thought about or known how to find.” But one way in which Reed was a typical teenager of the period was his love for rock and roll, especially doo-wop. He'd got himself a guitar, but only had one lesson -- according to the story he would tell on numerous occasions, he turned up with a copy of "Blue Suede Shoes" and told the teacher he only wanted to know how to play the chords for that, and he'd work out the rest himself. Reed and two schoolfriends, Alan Walters and Phil Harris, put together a doo-wop trio they called The Shades, because they wore sunglasses, and a neighbour introduced them to Bob Shad, who had been an A&R man for Mercury Records and was starting his own new label. He renamed them the Jades and took them into the studio with some of the best New York session players, and at fourteen years old Lou Reed was writing songs and singing them backed by Mickey Baker and King Curtis: [Excerpt: The Jades, "Leave Her For Me"] Sadly the Jades' single was a flop -- the closest it came to success was being played on Murray the K's radio show, but on a day when Murray the K was off ill and someone else was filling in for him, much to Reed's disappointment. Phil Harris, the lead singer of the group, got to record some solo sessions after that, but the Jades split up and it would be several years before Reed made any more records. Partly this was because of Reed's mental health, and here's where things get disputed and rather messy. What we know is that in his late teens, just after he'd gone off to New

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Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Jack Benny TV Show 1953-10-25 'Humphrey Bogart Show' S4 E3

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 56:10


You can watch it on our Spotify feed of the podcast or on YouTube here https://youtu.be/cNU92dpYUqI Humphrey Bogart stops by! Our team of Kathy Fuller-Seeley, Terry Phillips, and Zach Eastman, and Buck Benny introduce and present this wonderful episode!

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Imagine Air Theater
Episode 10: The Woke Detective

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 36:58


"The Woke Detective" is written and produced by Terry Phillips. It premiered on Nov. 20, 2022. A private eye is on the most unusual case of his life. The cast features William Jones as Buck Coyne, Amy-Helene Carlson as Shelly Patrick, Christine Kludjian as Rose Lee, John Erysian as Ned Newman, Chris Tilley as John Buru, Sharon Iwai as Kim Young, and Paul Messinger as Mick the bartender. Script consultant Mark Boyce. Sound engineer Scott Holst. Story editor Genese Phillips. Theme music by Roman Senyk. Special music by Kevin MacLeod. Cues include “Bass Walker,” “Covert Affair,” “Noir Number One,” “Dances and Dames,” “Deadly Routine,” and “Shades of Spring” ... all promoted by Mr. Snooze. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iYOvAO1rAM0 Additional audio from Rak Rak sound effects, AV Productions, and Sound Like Tube. Imagine Air Theater is Old Time Radio-style entertainment with contemporary themes. These are stories of the world as it might have been. The world as it could be. Sometimes inspiring tales. Sometimes cautionary tales. If you like these plays and want to hear more, please support us at https://www.imagine-air-theater.com/Support-us/  

The Study Legal English Podcast
E124: Top coursebooks for legal English learning (Monologue)

The Study Legal English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2022 31:33


Mon, 25 Jul 2022 04:31:00 +0000 https://studylegalenglish.com/episode124 5480637abbb9ce586d26c72adf3fb857 This episode is about coursebooks you can use to improve your legal English. The episode also features some messages from the authors of those books. Visit https://studylegalenglish.com/episode124 to get a FREE downloadable list of these books.

Strange New Worlds of Dimension X Minus One OTR
Episode 4: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2020-12-07 (004) Only The Dead (Terry Phillips)

Strange New Worlds of Dimension X Minus One OTR

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 12:29


Let's spend some time with Terry!

Imagine Air Theater
Episode 9: The Oracle of Delphina (Part 2)

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2022 17:27


https://www.Imagine-Air-Theater.com "The Oracle of Delphina" was written and produced by Terry Phillips. This episode concludes a special two-part story in our new season of short audio plays. Members of a Florida family face underwater dangers that threaten their world. How will they meet these challenges? The cast, in order of appearance, features Stella Valente as Cathy, Paul Messinger as Corey, Mia Doursounian as Amber, Heidi Brook Myers as Gen, and Evan Timmons as Andy. Casting by Stella Valente. Script consultant Mark Boyce. Theme song from Roman Senyk. Special music by True Cuckoo. Additional audio from Sound Snap and Rak Rak sound effects. Imagine Air Theater is in the style of Old Time Radio (OTR) entertainment, but with contemporary themes. These are stories of the world as it might have been. The world as it could be. Sometimes inspiring tales. Sometimes cautionary tales. If you like these plays and want to hear more, please support us at https://Imagine-Air-Theater.com/Support-us/ NEXT EPISODE COMING SOON!

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Episode 1957: Jack Benny TV Podcast 1957-03-10 (S7 E13) Jack Falls into Canal in Venice

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 49:45


Watch this episode on YouTube at https://youtu.be/tW3-JBgwfHE For TV Tuesday John Henderson, Terry Phillips, and I (Buck Benny) bring you another of Jack Benny and Mary Livingstone's international travels this time in Venice, Italy!  With a fun framing segment with Eddie Rochester Anderson.  It's also a rare episode on YouTube for no apparent reason, but this looks to be the only copy out there.

reACTION
Belleville Dirt Nationals Sunday Edition Boots On The Ground In Belleville

reACTION

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 13:11


XR Super Series Late Model teams rolling into Belleville ahead of Monday and Tuesday's XR Super Series events. The XR crew pounded the pavement to learn all about the history of the Belleville High Banks and the passion for racing in the community.We visited the High Banks Hall of Fame Museum and got a tour. We bumped into Terry Phillips and chatted about the cars on display, racing at the High Banks and what the racing will be like for the XR Super Series. We stopped by the shop of Sam Smith down the street from the track and talked to him about the history of Belleville, his late model teams, and what the track means to the community. Belleville Dirt Nationals Info: www.raceXR.comBelleville Dirt Nationals Tickets: www.raceXR.shopBelleville Dirt Nationals Live Broadcast: www.raceXR.plusBelleville High Banks Info: www.bellevillehighbanks.orgHigh Banks Hall Of Fame Museum Info: www.highbankshalloffame.orgTerry Phillips Racing: www.terryphillipsracing.com/For Upcoming XR Events: www.raceXR.com

Imagine Air Theater
Episode 8: The Oracle of Delphina (Part 1)

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2022 18:39


https://www.Imagine-Air-Theater.com "The Oracle of Delphina" was written and produced by Terry Phillips. This is a special two-part story in our anthology series of short audio plays. We meet members of a Florida family who get unexpected warnings from underwater. Will they understand? The cast, in order of appearance, features Stella Valente as Cathy, Evan Timmons as Andy, Mia Doursounian as Amber, Heidi Brook Myers as Gen, and Paul Messinger as Corey. Casting by Stella Valente. Script consultant Mark Boyce. Theme song from Roman Senyk. Special music by True Cuckoo. Additional audio from Sound Snap and Rak Rak sound effects. Imagine Air Theater is in the style of Old Time Radio (OTR) entertainment, but with contemporary themes. These are stories of the world as it might have been. The world as it could be. Sometimes inspiring tales. Sometimes cautionary tales. If you like these plays and want to hear more, please support us at https://Imagine-Air-Theater.com/Support-us/ NEXT EPISODE COMING SOON!

Strange New Worlds of Dimension X Minus One OTR
Episode 3: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2020-11-18 (003) I'm Not Dead Yet (Terry Phillips)

Strange New Worlds of Dimension X Minus One OTR

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 19:48


Terry Philips brings us another interesting production!

Strange New Worlds of Dimension X Minus One OTR
Episode 1950: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2020-09-29 (002) Fool Me Once Again (Terry Phillips)

Strange New Worlds of Dimension X Minus One OTR

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2022 16:10


Another of Terry's shows!

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Episode 6: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2021-03-05 (006) My Brothers Keeper (Terry Phillips)

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2022 22:48


The 6th episode in Terry's interesting series.

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Episode 5: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2021-02-12 (005) Smoking Gun (Terry Phillips)

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 13:50


Out west with Imagine Air Theater!

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Episode 4: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2020-12-07 (004) Only The Dead (Terry Phillips)

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 12:29


A soldier mistrusts negotiated cease-fire efforts in the midst of a border war -- with tragic consequences. Features Elsabet Ademe as Sarah, John Erysian as Andrei, Ara Madzounian as Omar, Nahom Tsegaye as Yonas, Arkadi Pasternak as the helicopter pilot, Harout Arakelian as the door gunner, and Bill Erysian as the doctor.

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Episode 3: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2020-11-18 (003) I'm Not Dead Yet (Terry Phillips)

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022 19:48


Terry brings us another Imagine Air Theater!

Strange New Worlds of Dimension X Minus One OTR
Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2020-09-29 (002) Fool Me Once Again (Terry Phillips)

Strange New Worlds of Dimension X Minus One OTR

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2022 16:09


Another great episode of Imagine Air Theater with host Terry Phillips!

The Milwaukee Sports Performance Podcast

Today, I am joined by Terry Phillips the in house physical therapist at Driveline Baseball, and recently, killing the internet game with amazing memes. At Driveline, Terry has the opportunity to support countless baseball players at all levels from high school, college to professional.

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Episode 2: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2020-09-29 (002) Fool Me Once Again (Terry Phillips)

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2022 16:10


Another episode of Terry's Imagine Air Theater!  You can listen to all of his shows here https://www.imagine-air-theater.com/

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Episode 1: Imagine Air Theater Podcast 2020-09-26 (001) A Failure to Act (Terry Phillips)

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2022 13:44


The first episode of Terry Phillips Imagine Air Theater. Here is a link to the complete archive of shows https://www.imagine-air-theater.com/

OSI Today
OSI Today (My OSI Journey 16)

OSI Today

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2021


On the eve of his retirement from the command, Mr. Terry Phillips, Executive Director, Office of Special Projects (PJ), and United States Air Force and Space Force Special Access Program Security Director, reflects on his unique career.

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Episode 5: Jack Benny TV Podcast 1954-12-12 s05e06 Jack Does Thanksgiving Grocery Shopping

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 44:55


go here to watch the whole show on youtube https://youtu.be/CWw736nsISg    Kathy Fuller Seeley, John Henderson, Terry Phillips, and myself bring you Jack Benny Thanksgiving grocery shopping... Alright, this is really Christmas grocery shopping, but grocery shopping always reminds me of Thanksgiving! So sue me, no wait don't do that!

The PUSH Performance Podcast
Ft. Driveline's Physical Therapist Terry Phillips

The PUSH Performance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2021 51:28


“Let's fix the cause of pain, not just the site of pain.” Today, we have Terry Phillips, the physical therapist from Driveline, along with our physical therapist, Nick Thurlow from Next Era Physical Therapy. Today, the crew breaks down: How to fully benefit from the relationship between your PT, strength coach, and skill-specific coach. How to focus on proper strength and PT that will help you be a better baseball player, not just what is the most “fun” in the weight room.  How to stay educated to communicate better with your org/school.  How to better understand load management while throwing; and more!  Head to https://my.captivate.fm/pushperformancegym.com (pushperformancegym.com) for more information about our comprehensive baseball/softball development programs or to learn about our culture. * Instagram: @pushperformco * Twitter: @pushperformco

DragonLance Saga
The Soulforge Gamebook Unboxing

DragonLance Saga

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2021 4:26


Join me as I unbox a copy of The Soulforge by Terry Phillips. It centers around Raistlin's test at the Tower of High Sorcery.

RealAg Radio
RealAg Radio, June 3: Replant decisions, rain needs, incremental sales, and more on the Farmer Rapid Fire

RealAg Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 55:07


Welcome to this Thursday, Farmer Rapid Fire edition of RealAg Radio! On today’s show you’ll hear from: Terry Phillips of New Liskeard, Ont., who farms an hour south of the 49th parallel, and is dealing with huge re-plant numbers; Drew Spoelstra of Binbrook, Ont., where the fields are pretty dry but most of the crops... Read More

sales decisions rain ont incremental replant terry phillips new liskeard realag radio farmer rapid fire
RealAgriculture's Podcasts
RealAg Radio, June 3: Replant decisions, rain needs, incremental sales, and more on the Farmer Rapid Fire

RealAgriculture's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 55:07


Welcome to this Thursday, Farmer Rapid Fire edition of RealAg Radio! On today’s show you’ll hear from: Terry Phillips of New Liskeard, Ont., who farms an hour south of the 49th parallel, and is dealing with huge re-plant numbers; Drew Spoelstra of Binbrook, Ont., where the fields are pretty dry but most of the crops... Read More

sales decisions rain ont incremental replant terry phillips new liskeard realag radio farmer rapid fire
Imagine Air Theater
Episode 7: Only Time Will Tell

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 28:19


https://www.Imagine-Air-Theater.com   "Only Time Will Tell" was written and produced by Terry Phillips.   In this seventh episode of our anthology series of short audio plays, a thief is offered the chance to go back in time and change history — for better or for worse.   The cast features Chris Lynch as Adam, Christine Kludjian as Salima, Stella Valente as Constance, Paul Rogan as Hans, Chris Tilley as the embassy receptionist, and Andre Vernot as the young man at the elevator.   Casting by Stella Valente. Script consultant Mark Boyce.   Theme song from Roman Senyk. Special music by The Waiters. Additional audio from Sound Snap and Rak Rak sound effects.   Imagine Air Theater is in the style of Old Time Radio (OTR) entertainment, but with contemporary themes. These are stories of the world as it might have been. The world as it could be. Sometimes inspiring tales. Sometimes cautionary tales.   If you like these plays and want to hear more, please support us at https://Imagine-Air-Theater.com/Support-us/   NEXT EPISODE COMING SOON!

SpyCast
US Air Force – Office of Special Investigations: Part 2

SpyCast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 49:47


Infosec. Cybersec. Techsec.In the second part of our double-header on the US Air Force Office of Special Investigations, we round out our previous discussion with two former Directors of Counterintelligence for the US Air Force, Jude Sunderbruch and Terry Phillips. Their world-wide remit includes cybersecurity, information security, technology protection and all things air power and counter-intelligence. N.B. – SpyCast 2.0Next week we reboot SpyCast with improved audio and some additional tweaks, hacks, bells and whistles. Through the rest of 2021, we will be seeking out every ounce of audio quality we can and continuing to refine the content and much else besides. We will also be rolling out new material including transcripts for each episode with time-stamps, extended show notes that break the content down and give you the take-aways, as well as links to further reading/sources and complimentary episodes. Thanks for your patience! It. Has. Been. Emotional.

Clay's Cortex Podcast
E29 | Load the System to Change the System | (ft. Terry Phillips)

Clay's Cortex Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2021 45:12


Stress, force, load, whatever term you would like to use can change a system. But are we loading the system enough to elicit a change? If you want to cause you body to change the way it feels, moves, or produces force you need to load it appropriately. The hard thing to figure out is... am I loading it enough, too much, or just right.  Many people experience unwanted sensations aka pain on a regular basis. When they can no longer withstand the pain they go to the doctor who typically refers them to a Physical Therapist (DPT). You go through their protocol and then once you have completed your sessions you move on. But what if that sensation comes back and your exercise protocol that was given to you does not continue to work?  Well in this episode of Clay's Cortex Podcast ft. Terry Phillips (DPT-Driveline Baseball) we will cover this topic and if the intensity or loading of the exercise plays a bigger role than expected.  It may not be the exercise but how you load the exercise that could be playing the bigger factor.  This discussion was a great one, the cool thing about this episode is that you will get some insight into what it is like to work with someone that is a THINKER when it comes to help you and your body.  I think that the field of exercise is changing and the ability to use knowledge, creativity, and data is where it is going. In this episode you will see a discussion that combines the ART + SCIENCE of TRAINING/ REHAB. Enjoy the episode, I hope that it helps to encourage you to push yourself with exercise in a safe manner. If you would like to learn more about our guest Terry Phillips | DPT, Driveline Baseball look below. Terry Phillips | DPT (Doctor of Physical Therapy) Driveline Baseball Twitter | @TPhillips_DPT_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Links are below for the plethora of options to absorb information. Website | YouTube | Instagram  ClaysCortexPodcast + CurtisClayTraining_TheKilnBuzzsprout | Apple Podcast | SpotifyConnect: Info@ClaysCortex.com  Clay’s Cortex

Imagine Air Theater
Episode 6: My Brother's Keeper

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2021 22:50


"My Brother's Keeper" was written by Carolyn Kourofsky. Produced and directed by Terry Phillips. In this episode of our anthology series, faced with the arrest of her brother, a small-town police chief must choose between professional duty and personal loyalty. The cast features Jordan Raggio as Isaiah, Adrian Mechelle as Sarah, Matthew Cwern as Kajansky, Roz Browne as Mama, Paul Messinger as the mayor, and Stella Valente as the news reporter. Casting director and dialogue coach: Stella Valente. Script consultant: Mark Boyce. Theme song from Roman Senyk. Special music by Nicolas Gasparini. Additional audio from Rak Rak Sound Effects. Imagine Air Theater is in the style of Old Time Radio (OTR) entertainment, but with contemporary themes. These are stories of the world as it might have been. The world as it could be. Sometimes inspiring tales. Sometimes cautionary tales. If you like these plays and want to hear more, please support us at https://imagine-air-theater.com/Support-Us/ NEXT EPISODE COMING SOON!  

SpyCast
U.S. Air Force Counterintelligence – Office of Special Investigations (Part 1 of 2)

SpyCast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2021 36:13


Counterintelligence. Counterespionage. Criminal Investigations. The Office of Special Investigations (OSI) have a fascinating remit around the world and across the country – one that also includes cyber, infosec and technology protection. What better way to break all of this down than to chat to TWO former Directors of Counterintelligence for the U.S. Air Force, Jude Sunderbruch (https://www.af.mil/About-Us/Biographies/Display/Article/1969469/jude-r-sunderbruch/) and Terry Phillips (https://www.af.mil/About-Us/Biographies/Display/Article/2438496/terry-w-phillips/) . They are colleagues, collaborators and close friends who have seen momentous changes in the operational environment since they first met back in the 90’s (are the 90’s “back in the day” already? What the hell happened? I’m getting old). Jude is currently Executive Director at their HQ in Quantico, Virginia (and yes, they do work closely with the FBI). With regards to Terry, what could be more “special” than talking to a Special Agent from Special Investigations? Why, a Special Agent from Special Investigations who is the Executive Director of Special Projects. I hope you enjoy this one as much as I did. Muy interesante.

Imagine Air Theater
Episode 4: Only the Dead

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2020 12:31


https://www.Imagine-Air-Theater.com "Only the Dead" was written and produced by Terry Phillips. In this fourth episode of our anthology series of short plays, a soldier mistrusts negotiated cease-fire efforts in the midst of a border war -- with tragic consequences. The cast features Elsabet Ademe as Sarah, John Erysian as Andrei, Ara Madzounian as Omar, Nahom Tsegaye as Yonas, Arkadi Pasternak as the helicopter pilot, Harout Arakelian as the door gunner, and Bill Erysian as the doctor. Casting by Elsabet Ademe. Script consultant Mark Boyce. Theme song from Roman Senyk. Special music by Jus Kiddink, courtesy of Free Sound. Additional audio from Rak Rak Sound Effects. Imagine Air Theater is in the style of Old Time Radio (OTR) entertainment, but with contemporary themes. These are stories of the world as it might have been. The world as it could be. Sometimes inspiring tales. Sometimes cautionary tales. If you like these plays and want to hear more, please support us at https://imagine-air-theater.com/Support-us NEXT EPISODE COMING SOON!

Imagine Air Theater
Episode 3: I'm Not Dead Yet

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2020 19:50


"I'm Not Dead Yet" was written and produced by Terry Phillips. In this third episode of our anthology series of short plays, a comatose man can hear what's being said around him — and about him. The cast features Michael Alaimo as Woody, Stella Valente as Charlene, Paul Messinger as Dr. Rose, Chris Tilley as Al Junior, and Amy-Helene Carlson as Erica. Casting by Stella Valente. Script consultant Mark Boyce. Music from Roman Senyk, with harmonic stylings by Totzig Amanatian. Additional audio from Sound Snap and Rak Rak Sound Effects. Imagine Air Theater is Old Time Radio-style entertainment with contemporary themes. These are stories of the world as it might have been. The world as it could be. Sometimes inspiring tales. Sometimes cautionary tales. If you like these plays and want to hear more, please support us. Tell your friends. NEXT EPISODE COMING SOON!

This Day in Jack Benny
Young Johnny Carson (TV Bonus)

This Day in Jack Benny

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2020 37:43


November 20, 1955 - Johnny Carson guest stars on the Jack Benny Television Program. Plus Don Wilson, Rochester and Dennis Day. Intro featuring John Henderson, Buck Benny, Kathy Fuller-Seeley, and Terry Phillips. Watch here: https://youtu.be/l9xAAa9fL4g

Imagine Air Theater
Episode 2: Fool Me Once Again

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2020 16:10


"Fool Me Once Again" was written and produced by Terry Phillips. Released Sept. 29, 2020.   A radio talk show personality manipulates her vulnerable audience to satisfy greed and ego. But how far will she go? Features Stella Valente as Dawn and Paul Messinger as Kerry. With Mark Brady (Rob), Christine Kludjian (Trudy), William Jones (Charlie), John Erysian (Sam), Don Howe (Pete), Bill Erysian (announcer), and Allie Alinson as himself.   Script consultant: Mark Boyce Music: Roman Senyk and Free Vibes Audio effects: Sound Mods

Imagine Air Theater
Episode 1: A Failure to Act

Imagine Air Theater

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2020 12:37


"A Failure to Act" was written and produced by Terry Phillips. Released Aug. 9, 2020. What could happen when those in power, faced with a crisis, do nothing? Features Paul Messinger (Alex) and William Jones  (Charlie). With Markos Kounalakis (Sen. Goldwater), Mark Brady (Gen. Brown), Christine Kludjian (nurse), Genese Phillips  (president's secretary), and Alan Smithee as Richard Nixon.   Script consultant: Mark Boyce Music: Roman Senyk and Free Vibes

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Jack Benny TV Show 1959-11-01 Barbara Stanwyck in Gaslight or Autolite

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2020 53:57


We present another rare Jack Benny episode for you this week with Barbara Stanwyck in Gaslight or Autolite as Jack liked to rename it. Stepping in for John is a newcomer to the show Terry Phillips! Check out his radio show in the style of old time radio at www.imagine-air-theater.com Here is todays episode on Youtube so you can see us and the episode:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4aCovDCbZw&t=1603s

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!
Jack Benny TV Show 1959-11-01 Barbara Stanwyck in Gaslight or Autolite

Jack Benny Show - OTR Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2020 53:57


We present another rare Jack Benny episode for you this week with Barbara Stanwyck in Gaslight or Autolite as Jack liked to rename it. Stepping in for John is a newcomer to the show Terry Phillips! Check out his radio show in the style of old time radio at www.imagine-air-theater.com Here is todays episode on Youtube so you can see us and the episode:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4aCovDCbZw&t=1603s

Muscles and Management
Episode #32 Strength, Speed, Movement and Finding Quality Professionals for Athletes with Stephen Osterer, Terry Phillips and Kyle Rogers

Muscles and Management

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2019 66:35


In this episode Gerry sits down with the three men behind Baseball Health Professionals, a new venture aimed at connected athletes, parents and coaches with quality professionals in the realms of healthcare, strength training, physical therapy and more!Dr. Stephen Osterer, Dr. Terry Phillips and Kyle Rogers are three of the best minds in the fields of baseball and sports performance training from multiple vantage points such as chiropractic care, physical therapy and strength and speed training. They give their takes on assessing athletes, how often athletes should be playing their particular sport versus training and tying all these aspects together to build stronger, better moving athletes and baseball players.Then, the trio discusses Baseball Health Professionals and the inspiration behind their successful attempt at linking quality professionals with those in need of care. From the minds of three very accomplished professionals in the industry, hear all about how they go about working with their clients and athletes and how their insight can help you as well. All this and more on this episode!Support the show (http://www.challengerstrength.com)

Feel Better, Move Better, Live Better
Optimal Return to Throwing (Featuring Alex Famodu)

Feel Better, Move Better, Live Better

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2019 43:10


Brandon chats with Alex Famodu, Certified Exercise Physiologist, about baseball injuries along with numerous things to consider when rehabbing and training the baseball athlete.   References Mentioned Driveline Baseball Driveline Baseball Podcast Kyle Boddy's Twitter Page Sam Briend's Twitter Page Terry Phillips Twitter Page Interview with Terry Phillips and Sam Briend of Driveline Baseball on HET Podcast On Base University Trevor Bauer Instagram Page Sleep Strategies featuring Brandon Marcello Podcast Effective Stress Management Strategies with Michael Miesner Effective Sleep Hygiene with Michael Miesner "Why We Sleep" by Matthew Walker Matthew Walker's TED Talk     Contact Information for Alex Instagram: @alex_fam Twitter: @alex_famodu Adam's Performance and Physical Therapy Virginia Center for Spine & Sports Therapy     Facebook Page:  https://www.facebook.com/feelbettermovebetterlivebetter/    Website for Podcast: http://feelbettermovebetterlivebetter.libsyn.com/    Itunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/feel-better-move-better-live-better/id1468907912    Spotify:  https://open.spotify.com/show/5I1HW6Fv5tYEZtk4yXpNBS    Contact Information Email: brandonpoen@gmail.com 

Diario Azucarado
#34 Podcast Especial Reto Crucial de Terry Phillips

Diario Azucarado

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2019 22:08


#34 Podcast Especial Reto Crucial de Terry Phillips ¡¡oooohhhh, ¿qué paso?!!! 34 podcast, 34 episodios llevamos ya de Diario azucarado tú podcast de literatura, librojuegos, juegos de mesa, de rol, vamos… de TODO UN POCO¡¡¡¡¡ y que hoy, hablaremos de uno de los librojuegos más populares de todos los tiempos, no es ni más ni menos que, Reto Crucial de Advanced Dungeons & Dragons de Terry Phillips, pero antes... Podcast patrocinado por Cinco Reinos, tu tienda de rol, de juegos de mesa, MAGIC, merchandising, wargames y cómics en Zaragoza, calle Mayoral número 9, tienen muchos librojuegos, pregunta. Su dirección web cincoreinos.com Y recuerda, Silicode Valley, plataforma de cursos de diseño y desarrollo WordPress, donde aprenderás a trabajar tu propia web. Pasa por silicodevalley.com Y recuerda, este podcast siempre está al día gracias a Librojuegos.org

Muscles and Management
Episode #10 Dr. Terry Phillips of Driveline Baseball

Muscles and Management

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2019 64:29


In this episode Gerry gets a chance to talk to Dr. Terry Phillips of Driveline Baseball. As a Doctor of Physical Therapy Terry has extensive experience in the rehabilitation and sports rehabilitation fields as well as great knowledge in improving overall movement quality.Terry has worked with Driveline Baseball for almost three years and in his time there has served as the in-house physical therapist dealing with all assessments, movements dysfunction diagnostics and overall movement quality improvement for all pitchers and baseball players.This episode gets into the details of movement assessments as well as a movement based approach when it comes to improving dysfunction, and details key areas many baseball players deal with when it comes to the rotational demands of the sport.In addition, Terry gives insight on his new joint venture, Baseball Health Professionals, as well as the importance of providing parents and athletes with the means to receive proper care with injuries and the ability to connect with quality health professionals.Support the show (http://www.challengerstrength.com)

Driveline Baseball Podcast
Driveline Baseball Podcast EP. 10

Driveline Baseball Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2019 69:00


Jason Ochart talks launch and attack angles, Dr Terry Phillips on youth injuries, and garbage hips Kyle and Mike and the baseball aging curve   Subscribe to the show for new episodes every week 

Fresno Bible Church
Terry Phillips Sierra Leone with GOM

Fresno Bible Church

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018


The Healthcare Education Transformation Podcast
Terry Phillips & Sam Briend (Driveline Baseball)- Teaching and Training the Baseball Athlete

The Healthcare Education Transformation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2018 42:46


Terry Phillips (Driveline's in house Physical Therapist)  and Sam Briend (Driveline's Lead Floor Trainer) of Driveline Baseball come onto the show to talk about Driveline and considerations for teaching and training the baseball athlete. They discuss their backgrounds and how they got involved with Driveline, what Driveline is and what they do within it, most common clinical conditions seen in baseball players and management, how to best teach and train the overhead athletes and much more! Special guest cohost Alex Famodu also joins the discussion. Driveline's Website: https://www.drivelinebaseball.com/  Driveline's Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/drivelinebaseball  Driveline's Twitter Page: https://twitter.com/DrivelineBB  Driveline's Instagram Page: https://www.instagram.com/drivelinebaseball/  Driveline's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/drivelinebaseball  Driveline Baseball Podcast on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/user-784598583  Terry's Twitter Page: https://twitter.com/TPhillips_DPT  Sam's Twitter Page: https://twitter.com/SBriend97  Sam's Instagram Page: https://www.instagram.com/sbriend/  Alex Famodu's Twitter Page: https://twitter.com/alex_famodu    The PT Hustle Website: https://www.thepthustle.com/  Schedule an Appointment with Kyle Rice: www.passtheptboards.com    HET LITE Tool: www.pteducator.com/het     Terry's Bio:   -Graduated from Ithaca College with Doctorate of Physical Therapy in 2009 -Moved out to Seattle shortly after in 2010 where I started working at an outpatient clinic -Began working part time at Driveline in 2016 -Moved to full-time at Driveline in June 2017  

CBD Talk Podcast
CBD and Pets - a Testimonial for Harry

CBD Talk Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017 12:45


Harry's human, Terry Phillips, joins us to tell us about Harry's experience with CBD and how it has helped him with the pain from his arthritis and how it is now helping him in his bout with cancer. If you are on disability, receive Medicaid or are a disabled veteran, check out Haven CBD for discounted cbd products at www.havencbd.com . Catch up with us here: http://www.cbdtalkpodcast.com/ https://www.facebook.com/cbdtalkpodcast/ https://twitter.com/cbdtalkpodcast https://soundcloud.com/cbd-talk-podcast/ Also, get information on CBD from https://www.reddit.com/r/CBD/

Central Valley Alliance of Atheists and Skeptics
“Religious Philosophy” Mark Boyd interviewed on KVPR

Central Valley Alliance of Atheists and Skeptics

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2016


Christianity in the California Central Valley gets a lot of attention.  In this August 2009 program Terry Phillips interviews guests with different perspectives.   These guests include Reverend Kurt Rye of the Fresno Buddhist Temple; Amanda Peterson, President, Board of Trustees of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Fresno; and Mark Boyd, President & Co/Founder of the Central … Continue reading "“Religious Philosophy” Mark Boyd interviewed on KVPR"

Crossroads Church
Death to Pride. Long Live Humility.

Crossroads Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2016 73:13


Terry Phillips talks about how humility reveals purpose and strengthens relationships.

Crossroads Church
We Three Kings

Crossroads Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2015 68:07


Terry Phillips talks about how only God gives strength through surrender.

Crossroads Church
Lone Survivor

Crossroads Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2015 59:46


Terry Phillips talks about living a dangerous life in order to be fully alive.

Crossroads Church
Parenting - Florence

Crossroads Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2015 65:28


Terry Phillips talks about Covenantal Parenting.

Podcast El Programa de Sita Abellán
EPSA_12_01_2015_Especial #oneweekonemillion - Episodio exclusivo para mecenas

Podcast El Programa de Sita Abellán

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2015 86:35


Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Entrevista a Nenita Danger, donde, a pesar de los problemas técnicos, nos explica con pelos y señales su gran proyecto que está ahora mismo en curso: #oneweekonemillion. Una performance sobre el espectáculo, el entretenimiento, los sueños y su cumplimiento, el arte, y la realización personal. Tras la entrevista, nuestra nueva colaboradora Miriam comenta la jugada y propone otros temas a comentar. Un programa aderezado con las voces de Dinah Washington y Julie London y el charme de Steve King y Terry Phillips.Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Podcast El Programa de Sita Abellán. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-podcast-el-programa-sita-abellan_sq_f130132_1.html

Podcast El Programa de Sita Abellán
EPSA_12_01_2015_Especial #oneweekonemillion - Episodio exclusivo para mecenas

Podcast El Programa de Sita Abellán

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2015 86:35


Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Entrevista a Nenita Danger, donde, a pesar de los problemas técnicos, nos explica con pelos y señales su gran proyecto que está ahora mismo en curso: #oneweekonemillion. Una performance sobre el espectáculo, el entretenimiento, los sueños y su cumplimiento, el arte, y la realización personal. Tras la entrevista, nuestra nueva colaboradora Miriam comenta la jugada y propone otros temas a comentar. Un programa aderezado con las voces de Dinah Washington y Julie London y el charme de Steve King y Terry Phillips.

WJTL
Dom Franco (Bethlehem)

WJTL

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2014 25:10


Terry Phillips welcomes Dom Franco of Bethlehem to The Archives.

WJTL
Richard Greenburg (Agape)

WJTL

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2014 20:49


Terry Phillips welcomes Richard Greenburg of Agape to The Archives.

WJTL
Randy Stonehill

WJTL

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2014 41:18


Terry Phillips chats with Randy Stonehill on The Archives.

We Are Going Up
Mini Episode: Solskjaer out, Slade in...?

We Are Going Up

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2014 39:28


The news was confirmed on Wednesday evening that Russell Slade had officially offered his resignation as Leyton Orient manager, presumably in order to go and take up the vacant managers position at Cardiff City. We catch up with the sports writer Terry Phillips, who covers the club for Media Wales, plus Paul Levy, co-host of the 'Orient Outlook Podcast'. Listen to Mark get Paul's take on the background to Slade's departure, whilst Terry explains how it all went wrong in South Wales for former Bluebirds boss Ole Gunnar Solskjaer. There's also a special guest on the phone, Felix Magath and 'cheese-gate' discussed - plus a special guest on the phone. We'll be back next week with DC back from his hols in Portugal... To contact the show please e-mail via

Crossroads Videos
Week 3 - Terry Phillips

Crossroads Videos

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2012


Terry Phillips talks about how a life of expectancy leads to the good life.