I was hoping to find a video featuring Andre Rieu playing violin of Charles
Ives'
Symphony No. 3... but nothing.   But... I couldn't resist sharing a
beautiful video of Andre Riue "'You Raise Me Up' live at Mainau, Germany":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJqiV55JnX0

<no-re...@americanpublicmedia.org>


[image: The Writer's Almanac]
<http://writersalmanac.org?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&elqTrackId=a7170f23156745b7891ce22be9c9ce08&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>
[image:
American Public Media]
<http://americanpublicmedia.publicradio.org?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&elqTrackId=df51291ab2d045eabb5c95d10b89b5fc&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>
*Thursday, Oct. 20, 2016*







It’s the immemorial feelings
I like the best: hunger, thirst,
their satisfaction; work-weariness,
earned rest; the falling again
from loneliness to love;
the green growth the mind takes
from the pastures in March;
The gayety in the stride
of a good team of Belgian mares
that seems to shudder from me
through all my ancestry.

"Goods" by Wendell Berry from *New Collected Poems*. © Counterpoint, 2012.
Reprinted with permission. (buy now
<https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=as_li_ss_tl?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&url=search-alias=stripbooks&field-keywords=Wendell+Berry&linkCode=ll2&tag=writal-20&linkId=9c4cb4f3e52b492bd62e8631dc4b90e5&elqTrackId=25adfab97a64417abf9d958f07e2f8c5&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>)


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*It's the birthday* of musician *Jelly Roll Morton
<http://www.neworleansonline.com/neworleans/music/musichistory/musicgreats/jellyroll.html?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&elqTrackId=1e1855fceaf44645982141e5f0500d1f&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>*,
born Ferdinand Joseph La Menthe in New Orleans (1890). He grew up listening
to French and Italian opera, hymns, ragtime, and minstrel songs. He was a
great piano player, and he apprenticed in the seedy bars and brothels of
New Orleans. In addition to being a talented performer, he was a pool
shark, a gambler, and a pimp. He wore a turquoise coat, a Stetson hat, and
tight striped pants. He said: "I was Sweet Papa Jelly Roll with the
stovepipes in my hips, and all the women in town was dying to turn my
damper down."

He traveled around the Gulf Coast, and from there moved on to the West
Coast and Chicago. In the 1920s, he was one of the biggest names in jazz.
He recorded major hits like "King Porter Stomp," "Black Bottom Stomp," "New
Orleans Blues," and the "Original Jelly Roll Blues." He was fierce in his
claim that he was the founder of jazz, and he is considered the first true
jazz composer because he was the first to go beyond improvisation to write
down jazz tunes. He engaged in highly publicized feuds with other musicians
who claimed to be the King of Jazz, the founder of jazz or the blues, or
any other title he wanted for himself. When the great jazz trumpeter Lee
Collins went to record with Jelly Roll, Morton informed him: "You know you
will be working for the world's best jazz piano player . not one of the
greatest - I am the Greatest."

*On this date in 1892, Chicago threw a parade to dedicate the World's
Columbian Exposition
<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/houdini/peopleevents/pande08.html?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&elqTrackId=ba631bd4bb0c430fa4f1e6b14631bde5&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>*.
The Columbian Exposition was a world's fair commemorating the 400th
anniversary of Columbus's arrival in the Americas. Planning for the
exposition had begun in the 1880s. Several great American cities vied for
the honor of hosting the celebration. City officials pleaded their case
vociferously and persistently, but in the end it was the last-minute
fundraising efforts of banker Lyman Gage, who managed to raise several
million dollars above what the second-place city - New York - had come up
with. Congress awarded the World Columbian Exposition to Chicago. Although
the original plan was to hold the exposition in 1892, infighting and
construction setbacks delayed the opening until May 1, 1893. The fair ran
until October 30 and drew 27 million visitors. The author Hamlin Garland
urged his parents: "Sell the cookstove if necessary and come. You *must*
see the fair."

Many products made their debut at the Columbian Exposition: Juicy Fruit
gum, Cracker Jack, Pabst Blue Ribbon beer, and Cream of Wheat among them.
In June 1893, a bridge builder named George Washington Gage Ferris Jr.
unveiled his invention: a 264-foot-tall wheel that bore his name. The first
Ferris wheel carried two thousand people at a time, at a cost of 50 cents
each, and it saved the Exposition from financial ruin. And Gottlieb Daimler
displayed a boat and an automobile powered by combustion engines: an
exhibit that would inspire Henry Ford to come up with his own
"Quadricycle," his first car, which he successfully tested three years
later.

*It's the birthday* of American poet, essayist, and translator *Robert
Pinsky
<https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poets/detail/robert-pinsky?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&elqTrackId=10c43a3390b64845b28e58bad3f0bfd4&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>*
(books by this author
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/search?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&ie=UTF8&keywords=Robert%20Pinsky&tag=writal-20&index=blended&linkCode=ur2&camp=1789&creative=9325&elqTrackId=42bd01bef1f8499293ecb338d97142d7&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>),
born in Long Branch, New Jersey (1940). Pinsky was a dreamy kid, easily
entranced by the sound of his fingertips against the headboard of his bed,
which he credits with giving him an early sense of musicality. As a boy,
Pinsky loved reading dictionaries. He says: "Read as much as you want, this
word reminds you of that word, you could just wander. It didn't matter if
you lost your place. It wasn't tyrannical like a story."

And: "Poetry takes care of itself. All art does - that is paramount. In a
survival race, I'm quite sure poetry will long outlast reality TV and
Twitter."

*It's the birthday* of *John Dewey
<http://www.iep.utm.edu/dewey/?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&elqTrackId=cbc001b0b54f4c05abc9fe62d63bcfdb&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>*
(books by this author
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/search?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&ie=UTF8&keywords=John%20Dewey&tag=writal-20&index=blended&linkCode=ur2&camp=1789&creative=9325&elqTrackId=e3cfcac27ade466f87edc1017c1703d0&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>),
born in Burlington, Vermont (1859). Regarded as the father of progressive
education, his best-known innovation was what he called "learning by
directed living," which combined learning with concrete activity. He
wrote *Democracy
and Education* (1916), and he founded the New School for Social Research.
He was a shy, scholarly youth; a friend said that ideas were like living
objects to him, and the only things he was really interested in. When he
was hired to teach at the University of Michigan at the age of 25, he
constituted the entire philosophy department. He spent most of his career
thinking and writing about education. He said that schools were useless
unless they taught students how to live as members of a community; that
they wouldn't succeed in teaching children anything unless they were
receptive to what children were ready to learn; and that they wouldn't get
anywhere unless they treated children as individuals. He once gave a speech
at Michigan in which he said there was so much knowledge at universities
because the freshmen brought everything they knew to college with them, and
the seniors never took anything away.

*It's the birthday* of cabaret singer *Adelaide Hall
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adelaide_Hall?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&elqTrackId=c3de5b79304441bdb712e46b57281788&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>*,
who broke into the big time with her wordless solo on Duke Ellington's
"Creole Love Call," born in New York City, in 1901. She first met Duke
Ellington in Harlem and by 1927 they were touring in the same show. She
said, "I closed the first half of the bill and Duke was on in the second."
One night, Ellington told her he had a new song, "Creole Love Call." Hall
said: "I was standing in the wings behind the piano when Duke first played
it. I started humming along with the band. Afterward, he came over to me
and said, 'That's just what I was looking for. Can you do it again?' I
said, 'I can't, because I don't know what I [am] doing.' He begged me to
try. Anyway, I did, and sang this counter melody, and he was delighted and
said 'Addie, you're going to record this with the band.' A couple of days
later I did."

She later explained her long and successful career in show business. "This
is how you do it, my dear," she said. "You get to know the musicians.
You're in the places where they are. And then you ask them if you can sing
a song. Be very charming, not too pushy. And be prepared. Know your song,
know your key. And sing it. And then someone will hear you and take you out
to dinner and give you a job. And there you are."

*It's the birthday* of composer *Charles Ives*
<http://www.charlesives.org/ives-man-his-life?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+20%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+20%2c+2016&elqTrackId=bc28c079f75045bf8395304b158d7ba3&elq=7f8946985b424f8c8a8ec2c00cee4aff&elqaid=24743&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21673>
was born in Danbury, Connecticut, in 1874.

His music is considered modern classical and is often termed "inclusive"
because he saw no reason to exclude any style of music - Brahms, church
hymns, college songs, Beethoven, gospel, singing at revival meetings,
sounds of nature, military marches, ragtime - so long as it expressed his
ideas. He said, "The fabric of existence weaves itself whole."

Ives won the Pulitzer for his *Symphony No. 3*, with other noted works,
including *Piano Sonata No. 2* and "The Unanswered Question."

He said, "Awards are merely the badges of mediocrity."





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