11.11.07

In Brief: Veterans Day Edition

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Here is your regular Sunday selection of links to good things in Blogville and Beyond.
  • Frederick Ahl, professor at Cornell, spent 14 years creating a new English translation of Virgil's Aeneid. In dactylic hexameter. Within 5% of the syllable count of the original and preserving many of the Latin's sound effects. Must. Have. It. [The Cranky Professor]

  • Wow, Bob Shingleton has something nice to say about the United States. The Kresge Foundation has given some big-time American dollars to the Aldeburgh Music Festival to build its new creative campus. That makes one proud to be an American. [On an Overgrown Path]

    UPDATE:
    Judging by the end of this post, Bob is apparently miffed at my joke about him having something nice to say about the United States. For the record, I was not saying that I do not agree with Bob's anti-American statements. Just noting that the Kresge donation is something to feel good about.

  • Fun with headlines in the Washington Post. [Wonkette]

  • The recommendations of Anne Sofie von Otter's CD of TerezĂ­n songs continue to come our way. Norman Lebrecht has written an incredible profile of von Otter and the story of her father's time as a diplomat in Nazi Germany. Looking forward to hearing that CD! [La Scena Musicale]

  • Why do journalists rarely report on real research in the arts with significant findings? Why do they always over-report the crackpot bunk? In La Musica Celata, Giovanni Maria Pala claims that if you superimpose a five-line staff on the table of Leonardo's Last Supper, you get actual music: "It sounds like a requiem. It's like a soundtrack that emphasizes the passion of Jesus." It sounds like The Da Vinci Code. [Associated Press]

  • Norman Mailer died yesterday. He was certainly an American literary giant, who created a memorable language in his varied body of work. Our own Todd Babcock reminded me yesterday of a favorite line in Mailer's screenplay Tough Guys Don't Dance ("I'm gonna go deep-six two heads"). However, Mailer is not an author who affected me all that much, so I will leave the tribute to someone else. [Soho the Dog]

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