Cindy lee berryhill biography of albert einstein
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Americana, Alt.Country
583 articles
The Band, Bob Dylan: The Band: Country Soul from Bob's Backup Band
Profile and Interview bygd Al Aronowitz, LIFE, 26 July 1968
BIG PINK fryst vatten one of those middle-class ranch houses you would expect to find in suburbia rather than on a mountain top in rustic Woodstock, ...
The Band: Music from Big Pink
Review by Al Kooper, Rolling Stone, 10 August 1968
EVERY YEAR since 1963 we have all singled out one skiva to sum up what happened that year. It was usually the Beatles with their ...
The Band: Friends and Neighbours Just Call Us The Band
Profile and Interview by Al Aronowitz, Rolling Stone, 24 August 1968
NEW YORK: Big Pink fryst vatten one of those mittpunkt class ranch houses of the type that you would expect to find in development row in ...
The Band: On The Horizon: The Band
Profile and Interview bygd Al Aronowitz, Hullabaloo, October 1968
BIG PINK IS ONE of those middle-class ranch houses of the type that you would expect to find in d
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A Dylan a Day: "Blonde On Blonde"
I finally got it, but I had to leave home and head up north to school before I did. Drugs were involved, of course. I was finally off my chain. Late at night in Madison, in our rooms in the euphoniously named Ogg Hall, we’d burn a stick of sweet jasmine incense, stuff wet towels into the crack in the bottom of the door, and light one up. The house fellows turned a deaf nose to it all. And so I found myself lofted high enough to sink my ears into what Bob Dylan had recently wrought.
Of course I’d heard the singles that preceded the 1966 release of Blonde On Blonde. They had dropped like a string of incendiary devices to blow up the radio, musical napalm: the acid-tongued “Positively Fourth Street,” the weedhead anthem “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35,” the lustfully persuasive “I Want You,” the sublimely beautiful, pitying “Just Like a Woman” (o dear Edie Sedgwick, was that really you?). There was another 45 most people, including mys
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Transforming Community Through Disruptive Empathy
As part of our ongoing series on Relational-Cultural Theory, we present Maureen Walker’s keynote address from the conference referenced below. Dr. Walker gives an excellent history of the RCT movement and her vision of the future guided by its principals.
Read the first part of the series, What is Relational-Cultural Theory? here.
Keynote Address, June 9, 2016
Transforming Community: The Radical Reality of Relationship Conference
By: Maureen Walker, PhD
As the Director of Program Development at the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute of the Stone Center at Wellesley College, Dr. Maureen Walker explores the linkages between social-cultural identities and relational development, as well as the impact of power arrangements on mental health. Through her publications and her work as an educator and licensed psychologist, she often uses Relational-Cultural theory as the lens to illustrate the interface between spirit