Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Tina Dico - Home


Did a little more digging around on the music group Zero 7. Seems they featured various female songwriters/vocalists over a period of time. The album "Simple Things" featured Sophie Barker and Sia Furler, both excellent artists in their own right. The next Zero 7 album "When it Falls" featured another artist, Tina Dico ( real name Tina Dickow). I've included two YouTube links to her song "Home".

With Zero 7:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pT8Wz1fa-_4&NR=1

Solo/Acoustic:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zbs_iw2ZNJE

I probably have a slight preference for the acoustic version. Either way, pure talent!

Monday, July 28, 2008

Music for a mood.



Found a couple new goodies after listening to musicovery.com My picks for this month (now that I own them and have had a good chance to listen at length).

Dusty Trails ( the name of the group AND the album)

Simple Things by Zero 7.

Give 'em a listen if you get a chance. I suspect both are on freenapster.com .

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Exposure to New Music




This post will be short and sweet. Found a website (new to me) that greatly assists in scoping out new music.


You can set your preferences; mood, energy level, decade, genre, etc., and it randomly plays a list of music. And you can link to ebay and/or Amazon so you
can find out more about what you're listening to.

http://musicovery.com/

Friday, June 6, 2008

What Happens in Vegas...............

................... carries poison Eastward in the wind.

I've always thought the the "Wild Wild West" was something that occurred during the 1800's. The pictures below make me think........ maybe the 1950's were even wilder.



Head to Vegas, have some drinks, play the slots or some blackjack, then stroll outside and watch a nuclear test. Mind boggling. The image above was obviously doctored up , here's the unmodified photo.


These tests occurred on a regular basis. Here's another. This is shot "Priscilla" (of the Plumbbob test series) set off on June 24, 1957.


Doesn't look like much from 65-75 miles away after it's dissipated a bit. (Though even at that distance the shock from these blasts would sometimes shatter windows in Downtown Vegas) Here's a closer look at Priscilla.

A bit more ominous from this distance. Amazingly somewhere in the neighborhood of 1700 US troops, most involved in the "troop observer indoctrination program" witnessed this blast from trenches at close range, the closest being only 3500 meters from ground zero. After the blast the troops were taken to within 500 meters of ground zero to observe the effects of the blast on military equipment, materials, structures, and ordnance.

Even more ominous than the above photo is this map.

This shows areas of the continental United States crossed by more than one nuclear cloud during the atmospheric atomic tests. As you can clearly see, it wasn't just the folks in Nevada, Arizona, and Utah that were the downwinders. We all were.

Friday, May 30, 2008

American Chernobyl ?




-----A father who had witnessed the deadly clouds while working in southern Utah told the author that when his son was born "his face was a massive hole and they had to put all these pieces of his face back together." "I could see down his throat, everything was just turned inside out, his face was curled out and it was horrible," he continued. "I wanted to die. I wanted him to die." The boy survived, but his father became suicidally depressed. -----

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From 1951 to 1962, the Atomic Energy Commission detonated nuclear bombs in the Nevada desert. Radioactive fallout from the open-air blasts dusted the skies and caused great damage to Mormon farm communities in Utah and Arizona. Medical records show that thousands of people were subjected to cancer-causing radiation.............the Americans whose misfortune it was to live downwind of the nuclear detonations - those citizens described in a top-secret Atomic Energy Commission memo as "a low-use segment of the population" - and of civilian workers and military personnel exposed to radiation at the Nevada Test Site.

Tests conducted in secret by the Public Health Service and the Atomic Energy Commission showed that the effects of the blasts reached far beyond ground zero in Nevada. Milk was poisoned in New England, wheat in South Dakota, soil in Virginia and fish in the Great Lakes, and sheep, horses and cattle were burned by fallout far beyond the Government's atomic reservation.
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American Ground Zero: The Secret Nuclear War by Carole Gallagher (1993) is a gripping and compelling photo-documentary that describes the largely untold story of the suffering and death of hardworking Americans at the hands of our own Government.