Saturday, November 26, 2005

links

  • Spoleto Festival USA (where I'm at)

  • Blognoggle's classical music page

  • a recent survey of meat lit

  • Larry Johnson reviews our Carnival

  • Jeremy Denk on SoBe's pleasures

  • Annie Proulx discusses "Brokeback", the story and the film

  • Chip Kidd gets a book of his own

  • Hear Music c/o Starbucks

  • Murakami's latest in The New Yorker

  • the geography of love (an excerpt)

  • San Bei Ji rocks a twelve-tone trio

  • Ashtanga Awareness by Kino

  • the ING Miami Marathon

  • Didion's Magical Thinking reviewed by Robert Pinsky, magically

  • "In Search of Mozart" on film

  • soprano Birgit Nilsson remembered

  • Public radio's Marketplace in China

  • Shunryu Suzuki's life and teachings at "Crooked Cucumber"

  • Made in Washington

  • Author Ian McEwan's website...

  • and an excerpt from his novel Saturday

  • interview with bassist Homer Mensch

  • Elizabeth Kolbert to world: Consider yourself warned (and warmed)

  • Michael Lewis on a football iconoclast

  • Jeremy Denk earns his climaxes

  • Matt Haimovitz's cellistic melting pot

  • prepare for your Google-ified future

  • "Agnes of Iowa," a story by Lorrie Moore

  • artist/yoga teacher/mom Bianca Pratorius

  • Synergy, a great place to attain enlightenment or meet chicks

  • Alex Ross on the symphonic scene in St. Louis

  • Critical Miami points out the hideous truth

  • a feast of music blogs by Brian Sacawa

  • MiamiBeach411 - they kick ass too

  • The History of Love by Nicole Krauss (an excerpt)

  • Oliver Sacks' website

  • Alan Alda on acting and taxidermy

  • Murakami at the Steppenwolf...

  • ...and in The New Yorker, cooking pasta

  • Olly Knussen's "fantastical world"

  • NewMusicBox, tracking new sounds

  • The Rainer Maria Rilke archive

  • Tasty koans from Jeremy Denk

  • MTT's bio, c/o the SF Symphony

  • Beethoven's Heiligenstadt Testament

  • NPR's Performance Today and ATC on Adams' Doctor Atomic

  • Retratos: 2,000 years of Latin American portraits
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