wow, all the headlines seem to be burying the lede that the newly added recordings are the infamous joe bussard collection (though maybe that's only headline news to record collectors) https://c.im/@didgebaba/115566845008488758
🔊 #NowPlaying on #BBCRadio3:
#InTune
- World-class classical music – live
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Relisten now 👇
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002m2cp
Ukrainian passport appears in newly released Epstein photos: https://benborges.xyz/2025/12/18/ukrainian-passport-appears-in-newly.html
Ohh .. En dan bedenk je na 20 min herrie in zh restaurant dat je je oortjes bij je hebt....
Wat een zaligheid .. 😀😀
Zelfs zonder muziek aan.
🔊 #NowPlaying on #BBCRadio3:
#MusicPlanet
- Live from Celtic Connections
Lopa Kothari broadcasts live from Glasgow’s annual celebration of global roots music, welcoming local sextet TRIP and Irish singer Lisa O'Neill into the studio.
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002prft
There's a word at the beginning and end of Dawn of Everything that feels self-referential right now: Kairos.
> We began this book with a quote which refers to the Greek notion of kairos as one of those occasional moments in a society’s history when its frames of reference undergo a shift – a metamorphosis of the fundamental principles and symbols, when the lines between myth and history, science and magic become blurred – and, therefore, real change is possible. Philosophers sometimes like to speak of ‘the Event’ – a political revolution, a scientific discovery, an artistic masterpiece – that is, a breakthrough which reveals aspects of reality that had previously been unimaginable but, once seen, can never be unseen. If so, kairos is the kind of time in which Events are prone to happen.
> Societies around the world appear to be cascading towards such a point. This is particularly true of those which, since the First World War, have been in the habit of calling themselves ‘Western’. On the one hand, fundamental breakthroughs in the physical sciences, or even artistic expression, no longer seem to occur with anything like the regularity people came to expect in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Yet at the same time, our scientific means of understanding the past, not just our species’ past but that of our planet, has been advancing with dizzying speed. Scientists in 2020 are not (as readers of mid-twentieth-century science fiction might have hoped) encountering alien civilizations in distant star systems; but they are encountering radically different forms of society under their own feet, some forgotten and newly rediscovered, others more familiar, but now understood in entirely new ways.
Reading this as I write something very inspired by this work feels especially serendipitous, especially at this time. When they wrote the book, I think that kairos felt more serendipitous itself. But as the frequency of opportunity increases, the veil between realities feels more malleable... that perhaps we can poke a finger through and open a portal to a completely different future than the one we've felt locked into for such a long time.
https://anarchoccultism.org/building-zion/the-coordinated-swarm-lyhr
Why we sleep: insights from current research https://www.ru.nl/en/donders-institute/news/why-we-sleep-insights-from-current-research
🔊 #NowPlaying on #BBCRadio3:
#SundayFeature
- The Music Man for Africa
Leo Sarkisian created Voice of America's acclaimed show Music Time in Africa. He recorded hundreds of musicians and helped newly independent African states find their musical voice
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002przx