Archive for the ‘Articles by Others’ Category
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In the realm of the jazz world, it seems that artists are categorized into two different streams: Those who can and those who can’t. But I think there’s a third category that often gets buried. There are those who know how to turn their sheer will and hard work into success. In his debut album as a jazz artist, Suresh Singaratnam, who has been known as a hot young talent in the classical trumpet world, has now succeeded on all counts. His charming personality and melodic style stands out on his freshman release titled, Lost in New York. This album is truly one graced with beauty and much thought. Many artists in the jazz community, especially for their first releases, often put together albums that are compiled of single standards instead of creating a whole experience. What Suresh created with original content and panache was a body of work that tells a story of transition into modern cutting edge jazz….
Toronto Music Scene’s Tanya Bailey had a chance to chat with trumpeter Suresh Singaratnam who has won numerous awards and scholarships for his playing. Here’s what he had to say…read more at TorontoMusicScene.ca

Who is Suresh? That’s what I was wondering when a West Virginia Public Radio listener suggested I listen to his album Two Hundred Sixty-One, Vol. 1… read more at WVPubcast - Blogs .
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Bill O’Reilly has been
brought low by the same process that afflicted Jerry Springer. Once respected journalists, they sold their souls for higher ratings, and follow their siren song. Springer is honest about it: “I’m going to Hell for what I do, and I know it,” he’s likes to say. O’Reilly insists he is dealing only with the truth. When his guests disagree with him, he shouts at them, calls them liars, talks over them, and behaves like a schoolyard bully.…read more at Roger Ebert’s Journal: Archives.
Suresh Singaratnam is still in his earliest years as a recording musician, yet his talents are already radiant. Suresh has been trained as both a classical and a jazz musician, and he has recordings to highlight both styles, yet he is able to maintain the important aspects of each music without his music becoming a fusion of two styles- his music stays true and authentic to both classical and jazz. On this album, entitled Two Hundred Sixty One, Vol. 1, Suresh Sinaratnam shows that as a trumpet player…read more at MicControlBlog.com.

Yesterday I had posted an album review of Suresh Singaratnam’s album, a collection of classical pieces entitled Two Hundred Sixty One, Vol. 1. Today I have another Suresh Singaratnam album for review, but this one is on the complete opposite side of the spectrum (style wise that is, because this album similar to his other is of the highest quality). This album, entitled Lost In New York, is a full fledged jazz album. It is truly rare to come across such a talented musician who has so clearly mastered a craft and style so early on in his career, but it takes the skills of a prodigy to be able to apply himself in a way where he can express himself to the highest degree through multiple musical disciplines…read more at MicControlBlog.com

by Emanuel Ax
All of us love applause, and so we should – it means that the listener LIKES us! So we should welcome applause whenever it comes. And yet, we seem to have set up some very arcane rules as to when it is actually OK to applaud….read more on Emanuel Ax’s Official Blog.
After crossing the bricked finish line on Sunday, the winner of the Indianapolis 500 will drive into the winner’s circle, be presented with a celebratory wreath and take a swig from a cold bottle of milk. The latter is one of the grandest traditions in sports, but also one of the most confusing. Why milk? Why is it in a bottle? And (this one was actually asked by a girl I knew in college) has it been sitting in the sun all day?…continue reading on Yahoo! Sports.
By Brian Clark Howard
Now that you know ketchup can be used for shining copper and repairing hair, or that vodka can be used to repel insects and freshen laundry, you may have been wondering what tasks you can get done for cheap with other household items.
Since May is National Vinegar Month (did you forget?), we thought we’d take a closer look at this inexpensive, versatile good....continue reading on Yahoo Green.
One of the first tricks in Penn and Teller’s Las Vegas show begins when Teller—the short, quiet one—strolls onstage with a lit cigarette, inhales, drops it to the floor, and stamps it out. Then he takes another cigarette from his suit pocket and lights it.
No magic there, right? But then Teller pivots so the audience can see him from the other side. He goes through the same set of motions, except this time everything is different: Much of what just transpired, the audience now perceives, was a charade, a carefully orchestrated stack of lies. He doesn’t stamp out the first cigarette—he palms it, then puts it in his ear. There is no second cigarette; it’s a pencil stub. The smoke from the first butt is real, but the lighter used on the pencil is actually a flashlight. Yet the illusion is executed so perfectly that every step looks real, even when you’re shown that it is not.…continue reading at Wired.com
The worst drivers in America live in New York. Of course, you knew that. You’ve been in the Holland Tunnel. But now, we have proof…continue reading on Yahoo Autos Article Page.
By Jeremy Hsu,
Hollywood and robotics researchers have long struggled with the “uncanny valley,” where a movie character or robot falls into the unsettling gap between human and not-quite-human. One psychologist likes to demonstrate this by holding up a plastic baby doll and asking audiences if they think it’s alive. They say no.…continue reading at LiveScience.com
Ok, so anyone in Canada who’s looked at the classical music page on the iTunes store today has probably noticed that Two Hundred Sixty One: Vol 1 isn’t on the top 25 chart anymore. I guess I got bumped with the start of a new week, haha! Oh well, time to sell more copies and get back on there….
It’s been less than a week since we began the 261 Days campaign and Two Hundred Sixty-One: Vol. 1 has already broken into the top 25 chart for classical music on iTunes Canada. What’s even more surprising is, in less then 3 months, my recordings of Carnival of Venice and the Hindemith Trumpet Sonata are now the best selling recordings of those pieces on iTunes Canada! To everyone in Canada who’s reading this, please tell EVERYONE you know about what we’re trying to do here. If the album keeps climbing the classical charts, that’s more even exposure to help move things along toward 1,000,000.
Click here to buy the album on iTunes
Click here to learn more about the 261 Days Campaign to raise $2,000,000 for the Canadian Cancer Society
By BOBBY GHOSH / WASHINGTON D.C.Friday, Apr. 24, 2009
He’s the special agent who came in from the cold — and waded straight into the debate over the use of harsh interrogation techniques. Ali Soufan, a former FBI special agent and perhaps the most successful U.S. interrogator of al-Qaeda operatives, says the use of those techniques was unnecessary and often counterproductive. Detainees, he says, provided vital intelligence under non-violent questioning, before they were put through “walling” and waterboarding… continue reading on TIME.com.
Did everyone hear how Ashton Kutcher donated $100,000 to fight malaria when he beat CNN to one million followers on Twitter? Ok, here’s what I was thinking…..
I obviously don’t have that kind of money, but I realised I WOULD if I sold 1 million copies of my first CD. Even if ALL of that was from digital sales on iTunes where I only make about $4 per album sold, I could still afford to donate $2,000,000 to charity (even after paying my taxes). While Mr. Kutcher’s donation was definitely a good deed, let’s be realistic for a moment; $100,000 is a small dent in his bank account. If CNN beat him to a million followers and made the contribution instead, $100,000 would have an even less significant percentage. I’m proposing to commit almost half of my earnings from the sale of this album to the cause.
Why 1 million copies? Isn’t that unrealistic? I think a target of $2,000,000 will be easier to reach than something lower. Here’s why:
You’ll have to admit that the absolute absurdity of my plan is quite intriguing. 2 million copies of a classical trumpet album by an unknown trumpet player from Toronto with no record contract…….during a global recession????? NO one sells a million albums of anything anymore. On top of that, this is music of a genre that is considered one of the least commercially viable. yet here you are, still reading about my plan. I have no small fortune to spend on advertising, nor do I have any existing fame to build this campaign on. All I have is a website, a blog, a 7 track album of surprisingly good classical trumpet music and YOU to help me raise this $2,000,000 for cancer research. Pulling this off will make the “grassrootsness” of Mr. Kutcher’s efforts seem like a corporate affair. I’ll need YOUR help to spread the word. If you’re reading this on my blog, you’re probably tech-savvy enough to buy the album from iTunes and save some money. (the complete album is $6.93 on iTunes, the CD is $10 USD + shipping). When we get to October 23rd and that cheque is handed to the Canadian Cancer Society, we’re all going to feel like we accomplished something pretty special. I’m also convinced that if a just few of the right people in the media get word of this, getting to 1 million will be a walk in the park. With the global economy the way it is now. We’re all looking for a collective victory right now. This is something that can transcend religion, politics, race, and nationality.
Now, to be fair, and continue with my own call to “be realistic”, I’m not going to pretend this isn’t a publicity stunt, because it is. I’m not going to pretend that I’m not doing this to sell my album. I’ll wholeheartedly admit that my main motivation for this is to sell 1 million copies of my first album. At least I’m being upfront about it, right? The very pleasant side effect of my experiment is a $2,000,000 donation to the Canadian Cancer Society.
So finally, here’s the deal:
To everyone who has already purchased the album, don’t worry, I’m not resetting the counter with this announcement. Your purchase just gained the added value of helping of something more important than a young musician’s career because I’m counting all past sales towards the target of 1 million copies. To everyone who doesn’t have the album yet, I’m inclined to recommend that you buy the album from iTunes and save a few dollars. I’d also prefer you buy the album from iTunes for a couple other reasons:
Some have suggested that I organize concerts and sell other merchandise to help with the cause. I think focusing on iTunes sales alone is far more cost effective.
Why the October 23rd deadline? That’s 261 days after the release of the album.
A final word to the skeptics. If everyone who reads this buys the album, convinces 2 people to buy the album and then convinces ANOTHER 2 people to buy it…..It would only take 20 days to reach 1 million. We have till late October. =)
To visit my website and purchase Two Hundred Sixty-One: Vol. 1 from a variety of sources: http://www.whoissuresh.com
Click here to go directly to the iTunes Store page for Two Hundred Sixty-One: Vol. 1
Click here to buy and download the album from CDBaby
Click here to watch the video ad on YouTube
Click here for more information about the Canadian Cancer Society
Thank you all for your help =)
Suresh S.
–iii-<
Amid the current media frenzy about Somali pirates, it’s hard not to imagine them as characters in some dystopian Horn of Africa version of Waterworld. We see wily corsairs in ragged clothing swarming out of their elusive mother ships, chewing narcotic khat while thumbing GPS phones and grappling hooks. They are not desperate bandits, experts say, rather savvy opportunists in the most lawless corner of the planet. But the pirates have never been the only ones exploiting the vulnerabilities of this troubled failed state — and are, in part, a product of the rest of the world’s neglect. (Read “No Surrender to Thugs.”)…continue reading on TIME.com
ROME (AP) — Rita Levi Montalcini, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist, said Saturday that even though she is about to turn 100, her mind is sharper than it was she when she was 20…continue reading at NYTimes.com.