The Blues: The Naked Truth (via Zoom)

Etta James once said, “A lot of people think the blues is depressing…When I’m singing blues, I’m singing life.” The blues is among the most misunderstood music genres, often associated with being “outa luck,” a self-pitying statement of a hapless victim of fate. More than a century ago, the marketing strategies by publishers of sheet music and record companies added to the confusion.

Drawing on cutting-edge research, we explore these strategies, untangle key terminology, and reveal something of the vast stylistic diversity of vocal and instrumental music that the term encompasses, ranging from its folk origins, to jazz, popular music and the concert hall.

  • Week 1: The myth of melancholy and climbing aboard a train
  • Week 2: Revisiting the Mississippi Delta
  • Week 3: Wild women don’t have the blues
  • Week 4: From boogie-woogie to Rock‘n’Roll
  • Week 5: Blues classics by Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk and others
  • Week 6: A Gershwin trifecta and its larger context: Rhapsody In Blue, Concerto in F and An American In Paris

Global Conflicts: A Geopolitical Approach 

The Council on Foreign Relations’ Global Conflict Tracker identifies 26 conflicts around the world of concern to the United States. The Russian invasion of Ukraine currently eclipses most if not all the other ones. We examine major recent on-going and potential trouble areas in Africa, the Americas and Eurasia, emphasizing geographic factors that caused or contributed to hostilities. Among  the topics covered are:

  • Geography and geopolitics
  • The US global deployment of power and its geopolitical good fortune
  • Civilizational conflicts
  • The situation in Eurasia
  • Border conflicts
  • China’s “Monroe Doctrine?”
  • Conflicts in the Middle East
  • The situation in Africa

History of the Oscars  

What began nearly 100 years ago as a PR stunt, designed to improve the image of a scandal-plagued movie industry, has become the most famous film award in the world – the Oscars. We trace its history from 1927 to today, looking at the winners and losers, the many controversies, and the changing role of the Academy Award in Hollywood history. Finally, we take a deep dive into this year’s race and the special challenges the Oscars have faced in the COVID era with declining audiences for movies in theaters.

  • Week 1: This year’s Oscar race. Why various artists and films won (and lost)
  • Week 2: Back to the beginning. The creation of the awards in the late 1920s by the Motion trade  organization – the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences
  • Week 3: Oscar controversies over the years
  • Week 4: The rise of new campaign strategies in the 1990s. Disgraced mogul Harvey Weinstein
    developed new marketing ideas for his Miramax Films, scoring upset after upset
  • Week 5: Oscar and fashion. The tight relationship between the movie and fashion industries
  • Week 6: Acting categories over the years. How the Oscar selections have evolved from awarding heavy favorites to quirky upsets

Drawing from Nature (via Zoom)   

A drawing course where we work with graphite and focus on getting as accurate a rendering as possible. We work with flowers, leaves, fruit, pinecones, fungi and other objects from nature, and from the instructor’s photographs. We draw together, with students observing the instructor’s hands while he provides real-time commentary. Students share their work as they progress.
Materials required are pencils 2H to 2B, a sketch pad 9×12 or 11×14, a kneaded eraser and an eraser pencil.

2-hour Class