One in 8 Million "New York is a city of characters. On the subway and in its streets, from the intensity of Midtown to the intimacy of neighborhood blocks, is a 305-square-mile parade of people with something to say. This is a collection of a few of their passions and problems, relationships and routines, vocations and obsessions. A new story will be added weekly."
A photo and audio series from the
New York Times.
[more inside]
posted by ocherdraco
on Aug 22, 2009 -
53 comments
Master of the 'didge' - after veins burst in his throat some years ago while he was playing the didgeridoo, doctors warned that continued playing would threaten his life. Admitted to hospital last week with bleeding on the brain, he died on Sunday from a brain haemorrhage. He was 40.
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posted by tellurian
on Feb 28, 2008 -
18 comments
Richard Petersen a Seattle street musician... an emotionally impaired savant with encyclopedic recall who taught himself the trumpet and piano by studying a production LP of musical cues from the obscure early-fifties television show Sea Hunt has been a touchstone in many Seattle lives for years. He has played trumpet outside of concerts, sporting events and blockbuster movie premieres with a can labeled "No Canadian Coins" at his feet for at least three decades. He is ubiquitous--apart from agoraphobics, the bedridden and those chained to a basement wall, everyone in Seattle has one or two Richard Peterson stories: he is well known and well loved. Here,
Irwin Chusid, on an
Incorrect Music Hour entitled
Music everyone at work can agree on, eternally plays--albeit on RA--Peterson's
The Enemy (Is on the Radio Singing My Song) and
After The Gold Rush from
Richard Peterson's First Album. His first album did well--he was big in Japan. He has four albums out. His
My Second Album is the
hidden song on the Stone Temple Pilots
Purple. He has put four albums out. And now there is
Big City Dick: Richard Peterson's First Movie--a
well received documentary.
posted by y2karl
on May 3, 2004 -
8 comments
New York Subway Musicians go to Korea (from ArtsJournal.com)... And they can stay there, as far as I’m concerned. When you’re an out-of-towner, or just use the subway once a year, buskers are so quaint and picturesque. But if you’re a commuter who rides the subway every day of your life, they are stupendous annoyance, preventing you from concentrating on your reading, and generally adding to irritating cacaphony of an already inhuman environment. The subway is not some cute audition club for aspiring mimes. As
Serious Danger points out, "approximately one in seven people waiting on your train platform is a face-slasher or a gut-stabber who will cut you with scant provocation, and less warning."
posted by Faze
on Dec 16, 2003 -
87 comments