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Posts Tagged ‘Massachusetts’

Looking for progress

Barack Obama unveils a revised health-reform plan

HEALTH reform has been the Obama administration’s main domestic policy priority for nearly a year, but the president himself has been frustratingly slippery on the topic. Although he has given plenty of speeches on the topic and discussed various worthy ideas, he has sounded more like a chin-stroking academic than a tough-minded politician. Until now, he has preferred to let Congress come up with specific proposals. Then, on Monday February 22nd, Mr Obama at last unveiled his own set of proposals for reforming America’s troubled health system.

It is a gamble bred of desperation. Mr Obama’s aloof strategy, adopted in response to the failure of Bill Clinton’s micro-managed attempt at health reform over a decade earlier, seemed shrewd just a few weeks ago. After months of wrangling, the Democrats did manage to push (slightly different) reform bills through the House and the Senate; all they needed to do was to reconcile them into a final law. But before they could, the upset Republican victory in the recent Senate race in Massachusetts robbed the Democrats of the 60 votes they need for easy passage in the upper house. …

Upward and rightward

America’s conservatives are in ebullient mood

RAMPANT: no other word comes close to capturing the mood of America’s conservatives as several thousand of them gathered in Washington, DC, on February 18th-20th for the annual meeting of the Conservative Political Action Conference. It is no surprise. With their recent capture of Ted Kennedy’s former seat in Massachusetts, the Republicans have robbed President Barack Obama of his Senate supermajority and appear to have blocked health reform, his chief domestic priority, in its tracks. Now Republicans are looking forward to big victories in November’s mid-term congressional elections, and beginning to wonder who their presidential candidate should be in 2012.

The CPAC meeting is, among other things, a beauty contest for presidential wannabes, and most of the most ambitious Republican leaders did indeed turn up to strut their stuff. A formal straw poll at the end of the jamboree put Ron Paul, the Texas libertarian, at the top of the list, with 31% of the delegates’ votes. Since he is 74 and unlikely to run again, that underscores the fact that the unofficial front-runner in the still undeclared race for the Republican nomination is Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, who came second with 22%. Sarah Palin came third with 7%, just ahead of Tim Pawlenty, the governor of Minnesota, who received 6%. Congressman Mike Pence of Indiana got 5% and 4% each went to Newt Gingrich, a former House speaker, and Mike Huckabee, the former governor of Arkansas. …

Steel Train: Tour, New Album

Steel Train on Tour with Tegan & Sara; Announces New Album

Steel Train has announced a new album and North American tour with Tegan & Sara.

The eight-week tour that began in Massachusetts on February 12 will give Steel Train a chance to debut new songs from their upcoming summer release (on a soon to be announced record label). The premiere track from the band’s new album will be Turnpike Ghost.

Steel Train will also be performing at this year’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on Saturday, April 17.

Steel Train

Tour Dates:

2/20/10 – Tampa Theatre – Tampa, FL*
2/21/10 – Sunset Cove Amphitheatre – Boca Raton, FL*
2/23/10 – Variety Playhouse – Atlanta, GA*
2/24/10 – Tipitina’s Uptown – New Orleans, LA*
2/25/10 – Palladium Ballroom – Dallas, TX*
2/26/10 – Bass Concert Hall – Austin, TX*
2/27/10 – The Warehouse – Houston, TX*
3/02/10 – House of Blues – Las Vegas, NV*
3/03/10 – Copley Symphony Hall – San Diego, CA*
3/05/10 – Fox Theatre – Oakland, CA*
3/07/10 – Downtown Brewing Company – San Luis Obispo, CA #
3/09/10 – The Clubhouse – Tempe, AZ #
3/11/10 – The Launchpad – Albuquerque, NM #
3/13/10 – McAllen Creative Incubator – McAllen, TX #
3/16/10 – White Rabbit – San Antonio, TX
3/17/10 – SXSW
3/18/10 – SXSW
3/19/10 – SXSW
3/20/10 – SXSW
3/23/10 – The Waiting Room – Omaha, NE #
3/24/10 – Orpheum Theatre – Minneapolis, MN*
3/25/10 – Riverside Theatre – Milwaukee, WI*
3/26/10 – Aragon Ballroom – Chicago, IL*
3/27/10 – Royal Oak Music Theatre – Royal Oak, MI*
3/28/10 – Lakewood Civic Auditorium – Lakewood, OH*
3/30/10 – PromoWest Pavilion – Columbus, OH*
3/31/10 – Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, TN*
4/02/10 – The Pageant – St. Louis, MO*
4/03/10 – Uptown Theatre – Kansas City, MO*
4/04/10 – Ogden Theatre – Denver, CO*
4/06/10 – In The Venue – Salt Lake City, UT*
4/08/10 – Keller Auditorium – Portland, OR*
4/09/10 – Chop Suey – Seattle, WA*
4/17/10 – Coachella – Indio, CA*
4/21/10 – Club 156, Boulder, CO#
4/30/10 – Meadowlands/Hoodwink Festival – East Rutherford, NJ
5/02/10 – Meadowlands/Bamboozle – East Rutherford, NJ

* with Tegan & Sara
# headlining


Evening Crunch Crumbs: Wayne Newton Foreclosure; Dimitri The Lover Documentary; Elderly Woman Attacks Robber With Price Checker

- Hollywood producer Brad Goodman (the man behind Borat & Bruno) thought it would be a wise idea to make a mockumentary about convicted sex offender Dimitri The Lover (AKA “The Reason Many Woman Stay Single….”). The disgraced former Toronto MD became an Internet sensation after odd voicemails he left for a potential mate went [...]

Evening Crunch Crumbs: Wayne Newton Foreclosure; Dimitri The Lover Documentary; Elderly Woman Attacks Robber With Price Checker

- Hollywood producer Brad Goodman (the man behind Borat & Bruno) thought it would be a wise idea to make a mockumentary about convicted sex offender Dimitri The Lover (AKA “The Reason Many Woman Stay Single….”). The disgraced former Toronto MD became an Internet sensation after odd voicemails he left for a potential mate went [...]

16 Entertainers Who Died In The Act

The massive ranks of those who live to entertain, are sometimes thinned by the Darwinian forces of dramatic irony. Wether on stage, on screen, or on a high-wire, the cold, bony finger of Death himself has pointed at many a star. Heart attacks seem to be a prime culprit, obviously some entertainers enjoy culinary pleasures [...]

Efterklang: U.S. Tour Dates

Efterklang Announces March U.S. Tour Dates Including SXSW

Efterklang

Efterklang will be hitting our shores in March for select U.S. Tour Dates following the February 23 4AD release of their newest album Magic Chairs, capping the jaunt with dates during this year’s SXSW.

Removing themselves from their home city and heading to Aarhus’ Feedback Recording Studio, the band recorded basic tracks as a band (drums, bass, guitars and piano), replicating the live set-up from where the songs had initially taken form. Later, back in Copenhagen, orchestral flourishes were added and guest musicians were called upon (including their touring band members – Peter Broderick, Heather W. Broderick, Frederik Teige and Daniel James).

For greater clarity of sound, British engineer and producer Gareth Jones (Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Depeche Mode, Interpol, Mogwai, Grizzly Bear, Wire and more) was drafted in for mixing duties to work alongside their in-house electronics wizard, Mads Brauer.

Tour Dates:

Mar 2 First Unitarian Church w/ Balmorhea Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Mar 3 Le Poisson Rouge w/ Balmorhea New York, New York
Mar 4 TT The Bears w/ Balmorhea Cambridge, Massachusetts
Mar 5 La Sala Rosa w/ Balmorhea Montreal, Quebec
Mar 6 El Mocambo w/ Balmorhea Toronto, Ontario
Mar 7 The Crofoot (Pike Room) w/ Balmorhea Pontiac, Michigan
Mar 8 Lincoln Hall w/ Balmorhea Chicago, Illinois
Mar 11 The Triple Door w/ Balmorhea Seattle, Washington
Mar 12 The Biltmore Cabaret Vancouver, British Columbia
Mar 13 Doug Fir Lounge w/ Balmorhea Portland, Oregon
Mar 15 Bottom Of The Hill w/ Balmorhea San Francisco, California
Mar 16 Spaceland w/ Balmorhea Los Angeles, California
Mar 18 – March 20 TBA – SXSW Festival Austin, Texas


Albums of the Week: February 12-18

JamBase Albums of the Week | February 12-February 18, 2010

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
Redwater: Time Is A Lie (Redwater Music)

At first it seems one has stumbled across a really good hard rock band, crusty as ’70s Robert Plant’s jeans after a fortnight on tour and unruly as sweaty old Sabbath. And this would be just swell on its own measure but Redwater starts throwing serious curves four tracks in with country tinged corker “Off To War” and from there they roam off the leash, jamming and prodding things with puppy-like energy. The stellar hard rockers return in the tail section and taken together with everything in between – including a real facility with slow burns -Redwater’s full-length debut (released February 12) is reminiscent of what Pearl Jam and The Black Crowes did in the 1990s (i.e. taking classic rock and building compelling new shapes atop that foundation). Though many ape Zeppelin and Hendrix, Redwater sweats their musk. They are young and there are definitely some rough edges, but they bear the markings of a band that could one day be really special. They’ve already offered up a frothing elixir against the Nickelbacks of the world with this highly enjoyable first salvo. (Dennis Cook)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Kenny Rankin: Catalog Reissues (Sly Dog-Mack Avenue)

“Yacht rock” is a term levied by the hipper-than-hip denizens of Generation Y in reference to the silky soft AM sounds of such 1970s acts as Christopher Cross, Loggins & Messina, Michael McDonald, Bread, Gordon Lightfoot, et al. The term also served as the title to a funny 2005 online video series spoofing the lives of these aforementioned soft rock superstars. Now upon listening to the late Kenny Rankin, who sadly died of lung cancer in June 2009 at the age of 69, it’s totally understandable if your initial reaction is, “Oh man, this is EXACTLY what Ted Knight would be listening to on The Flying WASP in Caddyshack (had, of course, Rappin’ Rodney not dropped anchor on it).” However, to pass off Rankin’s music as mere “yacht rock” would be a disservice to the ground broken by this most underrated New York-born performer, who grew up in the same neighborhood in the Bronx as Dion and played guitar on Bob Dylan’s Bringing It All Back Home, with his calming, natural fusion of soul, bossa nova, folk and jazz, utilizing the same panache as Steely Dan did for their Brooklyn-brewed blend of bop and rock. “He’s a fine musician with an original style and unquestionable taste,” gushed Johnny Carson, who invited Kenny onto The Tonight Show several times during his long run as host, in a quote on the inside cover of Rankin’s 1967 debut, Mind-Dusters. When you dig into this sextet of digitally mastered reissues of his sextet of seventies releases, curated by the Rankin family, you can’t help but agree with the late night legend’s sentiments. Though all six of these albums are gems in their own right, heads will want to start off with 1970′s Family, which proves Rankin was the only cat who could properly pull off back-to-back covers of The Beatles’ “Dear Prudence,” Bert Jansch’s “Needle of Death” and Otis Redding’s “Sittin’ On The Dock Of The Bay” without a hitch. 1972′s Like A Seed serves as the finest showcase for Rankin’s magnificent fretwork, especially his rare electric moment, “Bad Times Make You Strong,” written by both Kenny and his then-wife Yvonne, and 1974′s Silver Morning contains a version of “Blackbird” that so impressed Paul McCartney he asked Rankin to perform the song during Macca and John Lennon’s induction into the Songwriter’s Hall of Fame. Do yourself and your constitution a solid and introduce yourself to the artistry of Kenny Rankin and his thinking man’s sooth if you haven’t already. Yacht rock this most certainly is not. (Ron Hart)

Hot Chip: One Life Stand (Astralwerks)

Well, this is pretty freakin’ romantic, even downright syrupy in places (“Take It In” and the unavoidably homoerotic “Brothers” will test the patience of even the most stalwart New Romantic). Hot Chip’s fourth offering (released February 9) picks up the laced gauntlet of Spandau Ballet, OMD, and more obscurely the Blue Nile and Prefab Sprout – all wet-eyed, swooning English pop models. What’s absent are the crunching, saucy dance floor bombs they made their bones on. There’s a lil’ shimmy to “We Have Love” and the title cut but mainly this simmers low and REALLY sincere. It’s quite artfully put together, and in a way it’s a perfect Valentine, if one has the patience and appetite for such soft serve. (DC)

Excepter: Presidence (Paw-Tracks)

Long-running New York City noise collective Excepter release their eighth album in their eight years and go for broke doing it. Presidence (arriving February 16) is a two-disc goliath of transmission and atmosphere, mostly recorded live in the studio, including a 27-minute-long drone recorded on Election Day (hence the album title) that sounds like early Tangerine Dream, and “The Open Well,” another 20-odd minute jam that could be Can had they replaced Malcolm Mooney with Lee “Scratch” Perry instead of Damo Suzuki. (RH)

Glossary: Feral Fire (Liberty & Lament)

Folks with a serious yen for The Jayhawks and similar everything-in-its-right-place Americana should immediately check out Glossary. With just the right measures of twang and rawk, Feral Fire slides along invitingly, the sort of slab that grows more beloved with each spin. “Bend With The Breeze” vibes with It Still Moves-era My Morning Jacket, though the general feel is more rough ‘n’ tumble than those Kentucky boys. Led by Lucero‘s Todd Beene and produced by Centro-matic’s Matt Pence, Glossary’s sixth outing (released February 2) is a winner full of tattered hearts and souls ready for another round. (DC)

Jaga Jazzist: One-Armed Bandit (Ninja Tune)

Norwegian electro-jazz rockers Jaga Jazzist continue to master their craft with One-Armed Bandit (arriving February 23). But if you are expecting the laptop modality of 2003′s The Stix, you might be in for a bit of a surprise. The feel of this nine-track set suggests someone has been on a serious Frank Zappa kick in this band, given the heavy Grand Wazoo/Hot Rats vibe of the album’s title cut and the epic-sounding freak-out “Prognissekogen.” Elsewhere, “Music! Dance! Drama!” institutes a vintage Lalo Schifrin soundtrack resonance while the gentleman haze of American post-rock lingers long over most of the other material here. A brave new direction for a most incredible band; it’s good to see them back. (RH)

Hot Day At The Zoo: Zoograss (INTA Records)

One always got the sense from their lively, impressive studio work that Massachusetts-based HDATZ was a murderously good string band in concert, and Zoograss offers empirical proof. There’s a delightful, slightly breathless roll to this 14-track cross section of newer tunes and satisfying live versions of older material that shows things are evolving really nicely. Swept up by Zoograss one wonders why these cats aren’t as well known as Greensky Bluegrass, Hot Buttered Rum, Cornmeal and other festival/club circuit comers. What’s so appealing about HDATZ is how they make no nevermind about mixing up sea shanties, boxcar blues, fiddle numbers, rock classics and much else. This is simply the music they love to play, and their great skill, knack for cool fusions and potent personal energy is likely to make you love it, too. (DC)

Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra: Kollaps Tradixionales (Constellation)

After seeing its lineup expand to unreasonable numbers as Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra and Tra-La-La Band with Choir, SMZ thankfully pares down their personnel to a final five and make some of the best music of their careers on their latest, Kollaps Tradixionales (arriving February 16). It’s a fiery, psychedelic phoenix of an album that has more in common with the classical dirge of the Canadian group’s root band Godspeed You! Black Emperor than just about anything else they have ever done. Listen to this album and you will understand why the late, great Vic Chesnutt recruited some of these guys to be part of his last band. (RH)

Karnivool: Sound Awake (Sony)

This is some seriously tasty prog-metal. Australia’s Karnivool has a decent presence at home and is quickly building a strong audience internationally. Not hard to understand given the stormy, Mars Volta-esque vocals of Ian Kenny laid atop the exploratory heaviness of a band with a broad sonic imagination. Sound Awake (arriving February 16 in the U.S.) is perfect bong hit, low light music nerd fodder that also sounds like it’d be deeply satisfying played monstrously loud live. Those feeling Porcupine Tree and Dream Theater have a new band to discover, and while some of Karnivool’s moves here seem vaguely re-Tool-ed, it’s unlikely Maynard or any of the other touchstones would have produced the snarling, catchy head-charge of “Set Fire To The Hive,” just one of several promising signs here. (DC)

Nneka: Concrete Jungle (DECON-Epic)

With Lauryn Hill in self-imposed exile and no set date for an album she has been working on for most of the 00s, there’s a strong chance she’s pulling a serious JD Salinger on us for the long term. Don’t fret, however, as Nigeria’s NNeka Egbuna picks up right where Ms. Hill left off with Miseducation on her U.S. debut, Concrete Jungle (released February 2). This becoming warrior princess of African and German heritage keeps it real with her acoustic-driven fusion of soul and hip-hop, coming off on some Dead Prez type shit, though her music could fit in alongside Corinne Bailey-Rae and Erykah Badu as well as it could Black Uhuru and The Fugees’ Blunted On Reality. (RH)

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds: Kicking Against The Pricks: Collector’s Edition (Mute)

Nick Cave found his voice on this album. That’s his literal voice as a singer/stylist; as far as his rangy, evocative, often confrontational songwriting, well, that’s still evolving nicely. 1986′s Pricks finds the man and his coconspirators tackling meaty material from John Lee Hooker, Lou Reed, Jimmy Webb, Leadbelly and more. The results are a mixture of alluring and distressing, with all involved rattling the ghost chains inside the iconic tunes. As a singer, Cave discovered his sweet spot mouthing other’s words, and has only refined what’s present here since. You’d be hard pressed to find better takes on “Hey Joe” and “Long Black Veil,” and the fine remastering job does wonders over the original’s slightly murky haze. The sharp edges, well placed strings and conscious space shine through the speakers now, further adding to Pricks‘ considerable heft. And the informative, interview rich liner notes by Amy Hanson further situate this gem in the Cave-nology. Mute continues the Bad Seeds reissue series on March 30 with audio retools plus video and 5.1 Surround mix bolstered editions of Tender Prey (1988), The Good Son (1990) and Henry’s Dream (1992) arriving March 30. (DC)

Various Artists: Black Man’s Cry: The Inspiration of Fela Kuti (Stones Throw)

Coinciding with the Jigga-produced Broadway play and the newly revitalized Knitting Factory Records rolling out the same reissue campaign MCA did 11 years ago for Nigerian funk god Fela Kuti (with a much better campaign, in my opinion), leave it to Stones Throw to deliver a Fela set you should definitely look out for. Studiously compiled by Stones Throw czar Egon, this a collection of music inspired by the Afrobeat style developed by Fela and the international scene that evolved around the genre’s fruition, featuring music from the early ’70s scenes in Ghana, Colombia and Trinidad, alongside modern Afro-centric acts as The Daktaris, the Whitfield Brothers and Karl Hector and the Malcouns. Great stuff (arriving February 23). (RH)

Oops, We Missed It!
Killer Releases From 2009 That Somehow Slipped By Us

Monahans: Dim The Aurora (Misra)

Ever wonder what happened to Milton Mapes? If you, like JamBase, were totally smitten with 2005′s The Blacklight Trap and hankered for more, well, here it isÂ…sort of. MM’s Greg Vanderpool and Roberto Sánchez, formed Monahans, which offers a bolder, grittier, all-together more ready-to-leap into your arms sound. From unpredictable, liquid instrumentals to a simmering boldness reminiscent of early U2 to soothing calls to connection to hooky rockers, Monahans holds up a crackling torch to guide us through the gathering shadows. Positivity or genuine sensitivity are tough to wrangle into song form without sounding trite or cliche, but Dim The Aurora (released May 19, 2009) manages this feat repeatedly, gathering heartening sentiments inside musically robust settings. Can’t wait for album number two. (DC)

Guano Padano: Guano Padano (Important)

Free jazz, surf guitar and classic film music punctuate the amazing debut album of Italy’s Guano Padano, a late 2009 release on the ever-crucial experimental imprint Important Records. “If there ever was a soundtrack waiting to find its mate in the cinematic world, this album by Guano Padano would surely find good company with the likes of Fellini, Leone, Jarmusch and Sofia Coppola,” raved Calexico‘s Joey Burns of this multi-faceted trio, who count Italian singing great Bobby Solo, Captain Beefheart/Jeff Buckley guitarist Gary Lucas and Alessandro Alessandroni, the legendary whistler from Ennio Morricone’s Spaghetti Western scores, amongst the guests on this 11-track journey, which is a must hear for any Tarantino fan out there. (RH)


Female professor charged in US campus shooting had killed brother

Police say a University of Alabama professor accused of fatally shooting three colleagues at a faculty meeting this week shot her younger brother dead in Massachusetts more than 20 years ago but records of it are missing. Police Chief Paul Frazier says Amy Bishop shot her brother in the

Evening Crunch Crumbs: Khloe Kardashian Sex Tape?; Nancy Kerrigan Standing Behind Brother; Dennis Hopper Divorce Turns Even Uglier; Christian Bale Linked To Dead Body

-Olympic figure skate Nancy Kerrigan is speaking out on her brother’s role in her father’s death — which detectives in Massachusetts have ruled a homicide….
-The porn game has been so good to The Kardashians that middle sister Khloe is thinking of making a solo sex tape for hubby Lamar Odom….No comment…..
-Complex: When Celebs Talk Interracial [...]

Evening Crunch Crumbs: Bonnaroo 2010 Lineup; Anne Hathaway Turns Her Back On Catholicism; Beyonce Fist Pumps To “Jersey Shore!”

-Stevie Wonder, Kid Cudi, Jay-Z, Weezer, The Flaming Lips, and Manchester Orchestra are among the headliners for the annual Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Tennessee this summer….
-Portia de Rossi graces the March cover of The Advocate……
-24 heading to the big screen….
-The Massachusetts Medical Examiner has issued a homicide ruling in the death [...]

Bill Cosby Dead?

Comedy legend Bill Cosby, 73, didn’t pass away on Saturday — although a few devious Tweeters would have you believe otherwise:
“Bill Cosby was found by his wife Camille passed out on his recliner while watching TV in his Shelburne Massachusetts home. She discovered he wasn’t breathing and called 911. He was rushed to Baystate Franklin [...]

Scott Brown Action Figures

There’s a new superhero on The Cape……Massachusetts Sen.-elect Scott Brown won Ted Kennedy’s old seat in stunning upset last month, now a custom doll company is cashing in on his success. Herobuilders.com has created a new action figure modeled after the Republican, The Boston Herald’s Inside Track column said Monday.
Pickup truck sold separately….

The company [...]

Senator Scott Brown Wants Daughter Ayla To Get Second Chance On “American Idol”

Massachusetts Sen.-elect Scott Brown is putting his new-found fame to good use — the Republican lawmaker wants his oldest daughter back on reality TV. On Sunday, Brown told ABC’s This Week that he’d like his daughter Ayla to get another chance on the FOX talent show American Idol, where judge Simon Cowell once described her [...]

Anne Hathaway Named Harvard Hasty Pudding “Woman Of The Year”

Oscar-nominated actress Anne Hathaway was honored by Harvard University’s Hasty Pudding Theatrical Student Drama Troupe on Thursday as she was named Hasty Pudding Theatrical’s “Woman of the Year” during a ceremony in Cambridge, Massachusetts on Thursday. Hathaway joins a long list of actresses who have been feted by the Harvard theatrical group for their contributions [...]

Testing India’s graduates: The engineering gap

India’s tech workers are not as good as the country hopes and America fears

EACH year India produces about twice as many engineering and computing geeks as America, counting those with bachelor’s degrees or a Master’s in Computer Applications, a conversion course. This “engineering gap” is a source of pride in India and consternation in America, which fears the cutting and pasting of high-tech jobs from West to East.

Himanshu and Varun Aggarwal are two of India’s formidable techies. They hold degrees from top institutions in Delhi and Massachusetts. But if the brothers exemplify the engineering gap, the firm they started together in 2007, Aspiring Minds, is busy debunking it. …

The limits to verbiage

The president’s speech was underwhelming, which was probably better than the alternative

ONE thing you can generally count on when the lanky figure of Barack Obama approaches a podium is that you will hear a good speech; and the more trouble he is in, the better the speech is likely to be. He has never spoken more powerfully than just after losing the New Hampshire primary back in January 2008, or when the eruption of his pastor, Jeremiah Wright, threatened to derail him later that year. For his first state-of-the-union message on January 27th, the president needed something extra-special. His ratings are down below 50%, and the loss of a crucial Senate seat in Massachusetts a week earlier means that much of his domestic agenda, notably his efforts to reform health care, is stalled if not dead. But in place of the mighty oratory one might have expected, the president delivered an inordinately long, unrepentant but ultimately rather cautious speech that eschewed the tub-thumping and delivered a little bit to everyone.

There were alternatives to the middle course he chose. He might have tacked to the right, in the hope of winning over Republicans, but he would probably have failed. He might have lurched to the left, embracing the sort of populism that seemed presaged by his post-Massachusetts declaration that he was “ready for a fight” with the banks, but that would have alienated the centre. So he chose to remain, just about, the pragmatist whom this newspaper endorsed back in November 2008. But he gave no sign of how he plans to pursue his agenda or solve the problems that are piling up around him. …

In with the old

A cosmopolitan show of antiques in New York

VISITORS to New York’s Winter Antiques Show, from January 22nd through the 31st, are greeted with what appears to be a large stained-glass window in many shades of purple. Close up, this work is in fact some two-dozen back-lit objects made of amethyst glass, arranged on shelves against a faux window (pictured in slideshow below). They come from Beauport in Massachusetts, one of 36 houses overseen by Historic New England, America’s first and largest preservation organisation. To celebrate the group’s centennial, an array of its treasures makes up the feature exhibition of this annual show.

The Winter Show is owned by the East Side Settlement House, a social-service organisation that supports local families and community development. Profits from admissions and special events will benefit the organisation’s South Bronx education programme. That the Winter Antiques Show can comfortably bring together such disparate worlds and goals (historic preservation and urban literacy) makes this a true celebration of Americana. …

Tonya Harding On Nancy Kerrigan Family Tragedy

Former figure skating champ Tonya Harding, who was publicly shamed when her former husband hired a hit man to club her skating rival Nancy Kerrigan in the knee, is speaking out about the weekend death of Kerrigan’s father following a brawl with the Olympic medalist’s brother.

“Tonya feels very sad for Nancy and her family [...]

Tonya Harding On Nancy Kerrigan Family Tragedy

Former figure skating champ Tonya Harding, who was publicly shamed when her former husband hired a hit man to club her skating rival Nancy Kerrigan in the knee, is speaking out about the weekend death of Kerrigan’s father following a brawl with the Olympic medalist’s brother.

“Tonya feels very sad for Nancy and her family [...]