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The Barry Gibb Talk Show w/Jimmy Fallon and Justin Timberlake 5/21 SNL

This had to be THE most hilarious segment on SNL this past weekend. It is absolutely HI-Larious on soooooo many levels! Gotta love the falsettos! 

Saturday-night-live

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043/365/01

The Mediterranean Condiment Bar at our local Whole Foods store.  Every kind of olive and roasted red pepper, if you please.

Medbar

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Gota: The Gujarati Snack That Got Rediscovered!

Well, rediscovered only because I must have been under a rock all this time.  Because it has only been quite recently that I discovered this delectable savory snack in my Indian grocer’s freezer.  I was drawn to the bright packaging right next to the palak pakoras in the same section, and thought, okay, let me try something new.  So, I took it home, opened it up, pre-heated my oven to 405 degrees, laid out the balls of Gota onto a cookie sheet, and let them bake (reheat, rather since they’re precooked already) for a good twenty-five minutes.

G3

When I pulled out the tray, what I found were the most tasty and spongy fried fritter-like balls which came with a tangy chutney that I had to defrost.  I read the packaging again to find out that the key ingredients are chick-pea flour and wheat flour kneaded into a dough with yogurt and seasonings before being deep-fried.  Not unlike my pakoras but still quite distinct.

So, there you have it:  my lovely encounter with Gota, the Gujarati savory snack.  Doesn’t this just go to show how diverse the regional cuisines of India truly are– all these years later, I’m still discovering something new!

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117 Dead: Joplin, Missouri Twister Deadliest Since 1950

 

Smashed cars litter the parking lot of St. John’s Regional Medical Center in Joplin, Mo., on May 23, 2011. More than 100 people died in a tornado that left a path of destruction nearly a mile wide through the heart of the city.

(JOPLIN, Mo.) — Crews busted holes in concrete slabs and sifted through strewn home goods Tuesday as rescuers focused on crumpled big-box stores and apartment complexes in Joplin in a frantic search for survivors of the deadliest single U.S. twister in about 60 years.

 

One team poked through the remains of a Home Depot store, while others searched a Walmart and wrecked apartments as the clock ticked down on another round of severe storms that was forecast to hit later in the day. (See a photoessay of tornado damage in Joplin, Missouri)

 

A later search was planned with search-and-rescue dogs, and officials planned to test the city’s nine warning sirens while the sun was shining.

 

The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., warned of severe weather starting Tuesday afternoon in a band from northern Texas up to southern Illinois and stretching east into western Kentucky, western Tennessee and northwest Mississippi. Meteorologist David Imy said conditions were ripe for tornadoes in central and eastern Kansas, almost all of Oklahoma and northern portions of Texas.

 

“It looks like primetime for the greatest tornado coverage and intensity will be between 3 to 4 p.m. and 9 to 10 p.m.,” Imy said. “That will be when the greatest coverage and most intense storms occur.”

 

Thunderstorms are forecast in Joplin from 6 p.m. to midnight, and there’s a possibility of tornadoes, he said.

 

The massive tornado that ripped through the heart of the blue-collar southwest Missouri city of 50,000 people on Sunday was the deadliest on record in nearly six decades.

 

Sam Murphey, a spokesman for Gov. Jay Nixon’s office, said Tuesday that 117 bodies had been found but he didn’t know when or where the latest one was discovered. Fire chief Mitch Randles said he knew of only 116 people who had been found.

 

The two also differed on the number rescued, with Murphey putting it at 17 and Randles saying he knew of only seven.

 

“We’re getting sporadic calls of cries for help from rubble piles … most of those are turning out to be false,” Randles said.

 

Rescuers found one person alive at the Home Depot on Monday, but they also discovered seven bodies under one concrete slab, officials said. Search-and-rescue team leader Doug Westhoff said team members have searched as much of the store’s interior as they can and are now focused on what’s under the concrete panels. After the holes are drilled, dogs will be brought in to try to detect any human scent.

 

After rescuers pulled seven survivors from rubble Monday, Randles and others said they still hoped to find people alive. Westhoff agreed, but said the outlook was bleak because of the size of the slabs and magnitude of the collapse.

 

Until this week, the deadliest single tornado on record with the National Weather Service in the past six decades was a twister that killed 116 people in Flint, Mich., in 1953. (See a photogallery of tornado damage throughout the American south.)

 

More deaths have resulted from outbreaks of multiple tornadoes. On April 27, a pack of twisters roared across six Southern states, killing 314 people, more than two-thirds of them in Alabama. That was the single deadliest day for tornadoes since the National Weather Service began keeping such records in 1950.

 

The agency has done research that shows deadlier outbreaks before 1950. It says the single deadliest day that it is aware of was March 18, 1925, when tornadoes killed 747 people. The day also saw what weather officials believe was the single deadliest tornado when one twister ripped through Missouri, Illinois and Indiana, killing 695 people.

 

Sunday’s tornado slammed straight into St. John’s Regional Medical Center, one of the hardest-hit areas in Joplin. The hospital confirmed that five of the dead were patients — all of them in critical condition before the tornado hit. A hospital visitor also was killed.

 

The tornado destroyed possibly “thousands” of homes, Randles told The Associated Press. It leveled hundreds of businesses, including massive ones such as the Home Depot and Walmart.

 

Speaking from London, President Barack Obama said he would travel to Missouri on Sunday to meet with people whose lives have been turned upside down by the twister. He vowed to make all federal resources available for efforts to recover and rebuild.

 

“The American people are by your side,” Obama said. “We’re going to stay there until every home is repaired, until every neighborhood is rebuilt, until every business is back on its feet.” (See a video of the Joplin, Mo., tornado.)

 

Craig Fugate, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, told NBC’s “Today” show Tuesday that Obama has declared a disaster in the area, which means residents are eligible for his agency’s assistance.

 

“We’re here for the long haul, not just for the response,” Fugate said.

 

Early Tuesday, the center said there was a moderate risk of severe weather in central and southeast Kansas and southwestern Missouri, which could include Joplin. It raised the warning for severe weather in central Oklahoma, southern Kansas and north Texas to high risk indicating that tornadoes will hit in those areas.

 

The Storm Prediction Center also issued a high-risk warning before the deadly outbreak in the South in April.

 

Associated Press writer David Lieb in Jefferson City, Mo., contributed to this report.

Joplin

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In Speech to Congress, Netanyahu Calls for ‘Far-Reaching’ Peace but Rejects 1967 Borders

He said that could only happen after the Palestinians agree to live with a Jewish state that would include lands in the suburbs of Jerusalem and around Tel Aviv. While some land where Israelis have settled would lie outside its final borders, he said, the borders would not be identical to those of 1967 and before, which he said were indefensible. Palestinian refugees and their descendants, he said, would have to find their homes outside Israel’s borders, limiting their right of return to old homelands.“I am willing to make painful compromises to achieve this historic peace,” he said, adding that it would not be easy, because “in a genuine peace, we will be required to give up parts of the ancestral Jewish homeland.”

As the Israeli prime minister’s visit ended, he sought to put the final punctuation on a somewhat testy back-and-forth with President Obama that began last week as the president urged that the borders of Israel and a new Palestinian state should be “based on the 1967 lines, with mutually agreed swaps” of territory.

The notion of a return to anything like pre-1967 borders that bounded Israel before the Six Day War drew fierce criticism from Israel and many of its supporters, even though in Mr. Obama’s formulation it would include adjustments that would require negotiations over Jewish settlements built up since then. An angry Mr. Netanyahu objected that it would have left Israel a mere nine miles wide at the narrowest. Referring to the unity agreement reached last month between the Fatah movement, which is backed by Western powers, and Hamas, the Islamist group that the United States considers a terrorist organization, Mr. Netanyahu said that Israel would not negotiate “with a Palestinian version of Al Qaeda — that we will not do.”

“So I say to President Abbas, tear up your pact with Hamas, sit down and negotiate, make peace with the Jewish state.”

Mr. Netanyahu said that the Palestinian leader must do what he has done: “I stood before my people and I said, ‘I will accept a Palestinian state.’ It’s time for President Abbas to stand before his people and say, ‘I will accept a Jewish state.’ ”

He added: “Those six words will convince the people of Israel that they have a true partner for peace. With those six words the Israeli people will be prepared to make a far-reaching compromise.”

Mr. Obama had seemed to at least partly mollify his critics when he emphasized in a speech to the pro-Israel lobbying group Aipac on Sunday that Israel should be able to negotiate keeping some settlements in a final agreement with the Palestinians.

And just as Mr. Netanyahu had done on Monday in his own speech to Aipac, where he had again called the 1967 borders indefensible, in taking the same stance on Tuesday in his speech to Congress he emphasized the positive elements in a relationship where the tensions have been aired in public continuously for a week.

Making his second appearance before a joint meeting of Congress, Mr. Netanyahu entered to prolonged applause, accompanied by a hefty delegation of supportive senators and representatives. And practically every paragraph he spoke was met with more applause.

Through the exceptionally warm reception, and his own practiced working of the room, Mr. Netanyahu seemed to send at least a tacit message to Mr. Obama that Congress is solidly behind him.

He opened on a feisty note, with laugh lines and applause lines that were warmly received and with a calm reply to a heckler early on — a sign, he said to more applause, of “real democracy.”

“Do you remember the time that we were the new kids in town?” he asked Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who was seated behind him next to House Speaker John A. Boehner. Mr. Biden laughed and crossed himself.

And when he mentioned fighting terrorism, which he called a common cause, he proclaimed: “Congratulations, America. Congratulations, Mr. President. You got Bin Laden. Good riddance!”

Like Mr. Obama’s speech last week, Mr. Netanyahu’s dwelled at length on the promise of democracy in the Arab world, offering Israel’s vigorous support for those across the Middle East and Africa who have taken to the streets in recent months to protest against repressive governments.

“An epic battle is now under way in the Middle East between tyranny and freedom,” he said, offering praise to the “courageous Arab protesters.”

Of the 300 million Arab citizens across the region, he said, only the 1 million who are Arab citizens of Israel now enjoy the basic democratic rights those protesters seek.

“Israel,” he said, “fully supports the desire of the Arab people in our region to live freely.”

He also warned, though, of the dangers of “Islamic extremism,” particularly in Iran, which he warned might soon obtain nuclear weapons.

“Time is running out,” he said. “The hinge of history may soon turn.”

He said that “history will salute you” for sanctions on Iran, which the Obama administration tightened again on Tuesday, singling out companies including Venezuela’s state oil company that do business there.

Mr. Netanyahu spoke to Congress at the invitation of its Republican leaders. Some of them had been quick to seize on Mr. Obama’s position on borders to depict him as an untrustworthy ally of Israel, one who has edged away from the unstinting support for Israel that prevailed during the Bush years.

“It doesn’t make sense to force a democratic ally of ours into negotiating with now a terrorist organization” about land swaps, the House Republican leader, Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia, said Monday.

Speaking Monday to the lobbying group, Mr. Boehner avoided any mention of the border question, except to say that “in a negotiation, both sides need to make compromises.” But he added that when the other side in negotiations “embraces terrorist organizations, I think it makes its intentions known.”

The Senate Democratic leader, Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, seemed to take an indirect swipe at Mr. Obama’s stance in his own speech to the group.

“These negotiations will not happen, their terms will not be set, through speeches or in the streets or in the media,” he said. “No one should set premature parameters about borders, about building, or about anything else.”

That remark drew loud cheers and applause.  

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When Can You See The Stars?

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Shillong, Bob Dylan And Cowboy Boots

Shillong, Bob Dylan And Cowboy Boots
The third-prize-winning entry — a reflection on what Shillong’s famed and unfussy love for western music implies for the city’s self-perception …
Every year in Shillong on a grey afternoon towards the end of May, a man in a crisp white shirt walks down to a busy main street in a neighbourhood called Laitumkhraj. He carries a guitar, shiny with use, in a black guitar case and walks with measured slowness; nothing, not the kongs huddled behind minute wooden cartons that house supplies of tobacco, kwai and cigarettes, nor the anxious crowd that throngs the pavement, awaiting a crowded city bus, nor the idle waiters from Kelsang, lounging outside the restaurant’s dark doorway, cause the man to break the rhythm of his leisurely, swinging gait.

 

 

 

  While Dylan will be performed with unrestrained passion, his feverish poetry will lose its growls and wit and wistfulness. It will evoke, instead, the languor of a pleasant evening in a small hill town.  

 

 

 

He steps around puddles of afternoon rain without wetting his brown cowboy boots.

This year he could be on his way to the municipal swimming pool in the centre of town, one of the venues where Bob Dylan’s birthday is annually celebrated through song. In twenty minutes he will be walking down to the large swimming pool, blue as ice and empty of swimmers, a surprisingly evocative setting for an evening of what will essentially be gentle music. For while Dylan will be performed with unrestrained passion, his feverish poetry will lose its growls and wit and wistfulness. It will evoke, instead, the languor of a pleasant evening in a small hill town, and lull the listener into a sense of serene timelessness.

Here, on a low cemented platform facing the pool, looking out at the small crowd standing around, talking, giggling, and at the wooded slope beyond, lush with a rain-fed green, Cowboy Boots with his trademark grey ponytail and effervescent style will lead the Dylan concert. A couple of well-known names, some just born boy bands, some solo women performers with remarkably resilient voices, some old friends from Calcutta — all of these will join him to sing Bob Dylan numbers, songs of love, protest, mythology, warning or just plain sadness.

I never found this ritual exceptional till I came away from Shillong.

 

 

 

  It has the sense of near-insignificance associated with a hundred people huddled in the front of a hall that can seat five times that number, listening to the same songs that they’ve heard sung in the same way as last year and the year before.  

 

 

 

For this is a ritual — it isn’t your Channel [V]-style rock music party. It is an unobtrusive ritual, though a couple of people will always get a little drunk and tentatively scream ‘More!’ It’s not a concert that attracts hordes — it has the sense of near-insignificance associated with a hundred people huddled in the front of a hall that can seat five times that number, listening to the same songs that they’ve heard sung in the same way as last year and the year before.

And yet, till I lived in that city, all of this seemed fine. You went to the Dylan concert to hear musicians you knew play songs you knew, and their obvious talent filled you with admiration and restlessness. It worked both ways — the contained ambition of these singers, happy to be doing small things in a small town, filled one with a desperate desire to be elsewhere, to be someone else. And yet the power and belief in their voices, oblivious of the fact that they were, year after year, singing the songs of a man who was known for always being anxious to move on to the next thing, stilled you, taught you something.

But later, moving away from Shillong and meeting people who found an annual Dylan concert up in the hills utterly quaint, I began to wonder what an annual Dylan concert up in the hills actually counted for. What did Shillong’s famed and unfussy love for western music imply for the self-perception of the people of this city?

Take Cowboy Boots.

 

 

 

  To me there is pathos not in the songs themselves, which are not especially evocative or original, but in this sphere he inhabits, a sphere full of unrecognised contradictions.  

 

 

 

People recognise him on the streets — if not by name, if not as someone they have seen perform, then as a familiar oddball, a man who’s often seen walking around grinning, a man who is deliberately different. He is utterly irreverent, has a fantastic stage presence, sings rock and roll, does Chuck Berry-style shuffling duck walks. He is very local. He is often without work. He sings for money in the dimly lit lounges of three-star hotels on certain nights of the week.

In his own songs, Cowboy Boots writes about the small fry, the little man who gets conned by the big man, the guy who gets his head stuffed with education at school only to become a ‘wiser fool’. His songs are full of general observations on love and sorrow and the big themes. He stands out as a pop musician, though, because he has developed a unique personal style. He has taken the flourish of pop music, the narcissism and whimsicality that it allows for, and grafted that onto his small town anonymity. To me there is pathos not in the songs themselves, which are not especially evocative or original, but in this sphere he inhabits, a sphere full of unrecognised contradictions. In order to sustain his pop musician image he needs to live in this private ‘nowhere’, this Oz that exists only in a dream.

For the minute Cowboy Boots acknowledges the peculiarity of being a western pop star, he will cease to be anything at all.

 

 

 

  If each dot on the world’s map functions according to its inner, inimitable logic, then pop music in Shillong, however derivative, expresses something about common sentiment.  

 

 

 

While pop musicians in the west might be able to reflect on their situation and somehow connect their art to what is actually happening around them, should Cowboy Boots attempt to allow the outside world into his music — its language, its noises, its problems — he will lose his hold on the image he lives by. However much western pop music develops its own fictions and appearances, Cowboy Boots will always only reflect them. He is playing out the part of the showman who is playing out the part of a showman. He is a mirror within a mirror, a permanent fantasy, something that disappears on touch.

And that is why his music speaks to you only if you suspend disbelief, imagine away Shillong with its beauty and squalor, and think instead of a sanitised little world whose sorrows and joys are only universal and never particular. The audience for pop music participates equally in this act. Originality in music here never means more than writing your own songs. It doesn’t mean questioning the idiom of western pop music. But originality even in this basic sense is boring, it turns people off. A student bemoaning the lack of originality in an article in Funk, a college music magazine, quickly realises he just might be asking for too much.  ‘After reading this article this far, there would be a lot of people saying, “What the hell is wrong with this guy? If he thinks he’s so hot and oozing with creativity, let him go jam with Paul Gilbert and Billy Sheehan.”‘

So does it matter at all, this music, which is so much like the sounds Naipaul’s Mr.

 

 

 

  In Shillong pop music is still very much practised like a traditional art. There is no self-consciousness attached to it, no reflection. Its purposes might be important, but they are unexamined.  

 

 

 

Biswas hears in his inconsequential little neighbourhood, ‘sounds thrown up at a starlit sky from a place that was nowhere, a cot on the map of the island, which was a dot on the map of the world.’ But if each dot on the world’s map functions according to its inner, inimitable logic, then pop music in Shillong, however derivative, expresses something about common sentiment.

It points to the confusions of identify that beset us all in some measure, but it also shows how a city like Shillong can make these contradictions seem not just acceptable but cute. Shillong has space for exotic individuals like Cowboy Boots. In many ways, it is a city of make-belief. You could sing nice cover songs at concerts all your life, make people happy, and bypass post-colonial angst. You could put on a cosmopolitan air here, for other cities in the region like Kohima and Aizawl are too provincial, Guwahati too alienatingly urban, and the rest of the country too far away. You could live there for twenty-five years, as I have — loving its small-towns charms, chaffing constantly about not knowing your place in it — and spend the rest of your life fighting nostalgia.

Shillong then is susceptible to the glamour and the seductions of pop music. People like Cowboy Boots are completely at home here. Here he can be a local celebrity while dreaming irrelevant dreams about global fame.

 

 

 

  Anxiety about the fragility of ethnic identities is expressed in diverse ways — from murder to letters to the local newspaper editor.  

 

 

 

For he actually wishes to do nothing to be that famous. He would be lost in New Delhi or New York. Here he can be bohemian in an unthreatening way, poke fun at Backstreet Boys, speak to strangers about the vegetables he grows. He can combine in himself so many things that are typical to Shillong — the love of music, the small-town imperviousness to criticism, a certain innocence, a certain swagger…

But this also means that the stance of dissent in some of Shillong’s music cannot be much more than a harmless posture. For those people who sing the blues, swear by Dylan, do rock and roll, adore Bob Marley, are not necessarily those likely to assert a point of view, question authority, reflect on their identify as artists. There might have been a larger culture of protest that produced singers like Dylan, and the Beatles got where they did because they spoke with daring confidence to an entire generation, but in Shillong pop music is still very much practised like a traditional art. There is no self-consciousness attached to it, no reflection. Its purposes might be important, but they are unexamined.

Pop music is performed with a tremendous enthusiasm and genuine joy. Yet because of its context it expresses a yearning distinct from that of western pop. It expresses the yearning for another life, a life revealed in luminous five minute flashes, a life that we can only experience vicariously, a life that we wouldn’t know how to describe except that it seems to exist in the West.

 

 

 

  Who are her children’s heroes? People who have somehow ‘made it’, who have travelled abroad, who wear the right clothes, who speak good English.  

 

 

 

The differences between a Bob Dylan and a Bob Marley are irrelevant, they melt in that beautiful sadness we feel as soon as a guitar note is struck and this fantasy re-lived for the thousandth time.

Musicians, then, are friezes who come to life on stage and then disappear into the malaise of everyday life in Shillong. They play with rare spontaneity and skill, and you listen to them not to get a point of view on life in the city, but to escape it. For while there might be no real dissent in the music, all around us is more dissent than we can handle. On the streets of Shillong, protest is always so many things. Anxiety about the fragility of ethnic identities is expressed in diverse ways — from murder to letters to the local newspaper editor. This is protest that constantly impacts on the lives of people, demanding of them fixed positions and points of view. Yet pop music does not reflect these anxieties — it does not even reject them. It feeds off itself, off its own pleasures and poses.

Western music cannot enter this volatile world because the west is from where we derive the images we find desirable and wish to imitate. The west does not tell us how we should treat our neighbours or which ideals we ought to burn down shops for — all it gives us is a greatly seductive style. And no other form of culture is as susceptible to style — in the sense in which this word is opposed to substance — as pop music.

 

 

 

  But you can’t make a living out of it. I have known pop musicians to complain that their more distant relatives consider their chosen careers ludicrous. And yet, music and ‘western’ musicians are there, everywhere.  

 

 

 

Maybe Marley was able to make style a function of an intellectual position. He had something to say about the Carribean’s position in history, and he thereby put his own stamp on pop music. But take away this need to express something important, and all that pop leaves you with are memorable gestures.

Which is not to say that political agendas of themselves lend substance to art. On the contrary, the sense of community that forms the basis for protest and violence in Shillong, could actually be a rather restrictive thing. It is compelling and counts for a great deal, but it sets itself up as the last word on the question of who we are, when it is actually one of the many possible answers to that difficult question.

Take the case of my friend, Riti. Riti has never been on a train but her greatest aspiration is to have her children study outside the Northeast. Her parents belong to a generation that regarded all imports from the plains with awe — from English-speaking Mems to pressure cookers. Riti thinks it a sign of great accomplishment if she can get her homely traditional kitchen to turn out something like fried noodles. Her uniqueness, the uniqueness of her position is worth chronicling, just like Cowboy Boots is important for what he reveals about Shillong. But these individual aspirations, which can only be described as modern, somehow get erased in general formulations about tribal identity, and art, which could fill this gap — hold up a mirror to people’s ambiguities and specificities — fails to do so.

Hanif Kureishi writing about the Beatles phenomenon in his essay, ‘Eight Arms to Hold You’ describes what they represented to people of his generation in Britain. ‘For most, this pleasure [of listening to the Beatles] lasted only a few hours and then faded. But for others it opened a door to the sort of life that might, one day, be lived. And so the Beatles came to represent opportunity and possibility. They were career officers, a myth for us to live by, a light for us to follow.’  The Beatles were able to upturn prevalent notions of what constituted ‘culture’ because they showed now it was possible to both be creative and have a good time, to both have something important to say and eschew pretensions to high art.

Shouldn’t a singer who takes the risk of living entirely by an image of the 1960s western pop musician, who genuinely considers himself an artist, who displays a great deal of cheek and naughty humour, who sings with seductive charm, be the most sought after role model of Shillong’s west-infatuated youth? But he isn’t. His concerts are only attended by faithfuls, and are rarely sell-outs. I don’t know how many young people would be able to identify his songs. He is recognised on the streets of Shillong less for his music, and more because he has great style.

Consider my friend Riti again. Who are her children’s heroes?  People who have somehow ‘made it’, who have travelled abroad, who wear the right clothes, who speak good English. Riti desires financially secure futures for her children — and never mind where the money comes from — futures that are a whirl of lacy pink dresses and polished black boots, guitar-playing, child-bearing, church-going, house-building, money-making futures.

For music is fine sometimes, but you can’t make a living out of it. I have known pop musicians to complain that their more distant relatives consider their chosen careers ludicrous. And yet, there is music everywhere and ‘western’ musicians of all persuasions — elderly, mildly eccentric, men in Stetsons who run music schools where kids learn to play ‘I am Sailing’ on the guitar, middle-aged men from pop bands who work in government offices by day and jam with friends three nights a week, middle-aged women who play classical western piano and teach music in convent schools, screechingly loud boy bands, young honey-voiced women who sing solo or perform Christmas carols on the local television channel in December. Then there are people who just play music because it’s part of their upbringing — like the women in the neighbour’s house when I was growing up, who would drift into carpeted drawing rooms and sit at the piano for a while playing something sweet and melancholy, and then sigh and get on with their unhappy lives.

And the west is near, and yet so far. Bob Dylan could be a local hero, the way devotees sing happy birthday to him each year. But despite these birthday parties, he will never age. The words of his songs will remain frozen in memory, Cowboy Boots will do Dylan-voiced imitations every 24th of May, while all around him life in Shillong ebbs and flows to the rhythm of some other, less audible music.
via outlookindia.com 

Shillong

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Jesse Cook feat. Melissa McClelland – It Ain't Me Babe

Happy Birthday today, Mr. Zimmerman (aka, Bob Dylan)!

Jesse Cook is amazing with the guitar! One of my all-time favorites: It ain’t me babe… 🙂

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