User:Eugenia ioessa/sandbox
4AD discography
[edit]Year | Artist | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
AXIS | |||
1980 | Fast Set | Junction One | AXIS 1[1] |
1980 | Bearz | She's My Girl | AXIS 2 |
1980 | Bauhaus | Dark Entries | AXIS 3 |
1980 | SHOX | No Turning Back | AXIS 4 |
4AD | |||
1980-03-31 | Rema-Rema | Wheel in the Roses | |
1980-05-12 | Modern English | Swans on Glass | |
1980-05-12 | In Camera | Final Achievement / Die Laughing | |
1980-06-02 | Bauhaus | Terror Couple Kill Colonel | |
1980-07-07 | Cupol | Like This for Ages | |
1980-08-04 | The The | Controversial Subject | |
1980-09-01 | Various artists | Presage(s) | |
1980-10-13 | The Birthday Party | The Friend Catcher | |
1980-10-20 | Mass | You and I | |
1980-10-27 | Modern English | Gathering Dust | |
1980-11-03 | Bauhaus | In the Flat Field | |
1980-11-10 | Gilbert and Lewis | 3R4 | |
1980-12-01 | Bauhaus | Telegram Sam | |
1980-12-01 | Dance Chapter | Anonymity | |
1980-12-15 | In Camera | IV Songs | |
1981-02-02 | Sort Sol | Marble Station | [2] |
1981-03-02 | The Past Seven Days | Raindance | |
1981-03-09 | Gilbert and Lewis | Ends with the Sea | |
1981-04-06 | The Birthday Party | Prayers on Fire | |
1981-04-06 | Modern English | Mesh & Lace | |
1981-04-06 | Mass | Labour of Love | |
1981-06-01 | Colin Newman | Provisionally Entitled The Singing Fish / Not | |
1981-07-06 | Dif Juz | Huremics | |
1981-07-27 | The Birthday Party | Release the Bats | |
1981-08-01 | The The | Burning Blue Soul | |
1981-08-03 | Modern English | Smiles and Laughter | |
1981-08-10 | Rene Halkett / David Jay | Nothing | |
1981-09-07 | The Birthday Party | Mr. Clarinet | |
1981-09-14 | Dance Chapter | Chapter II | |
1981-10-05 | Dif Juz | Vibrating Air | |
1981-10-05 | Various artists | Natures mortes | |
1982-01-11 | Colin Newman | Not To | [3] |
1982-02-15 | The Birthday Party / Lydia Lunch | Drunk on the Pope's Blood / The Agony Is the Ecstacy | |
1982-03-01 | Tones on Tail | Tones on Tail | |
1982-03-15 | The Happy Family | Puritans | |
1982-04-12 | In Camera | Fin | |
1982-05-03 | Modern English | After the Snow | |
1982-05-10 | The Birthday Party | Junkyard | |
1982-06-07 | Modern English | Life in the Gladhouse | |
1982-07-01 | Colin Newman | We Means We Starts | |
1982-08-09 | Modern English | I Melt with You | |
1982-09-01 | Cocteau Twins | Garlands | |
1982-09-01 | Rowland S. Howard / Lydia Lunch | Some Velvet Morning | |
1982-11-01 | The Man on Your Street | The Happy Family | |
1982-11-01 | Cocteau Twins | Lullabies | |
1982-11-01 | Colourbox | Breakdown | |
1983-03-14 | The Birthday Party | The Bad Seed | [4] |
1983-04-04 | Cocteau Twins | Peppermint Pig | |
1983-04-11 | Xmal Deutshland | Fetisch | |
1983-05-02 | Colourbox | Breakdown (Second Version) | |
1983-06-20 | Xmal Deutshland | Qual | |
1983-07-04 | The Birthday Party | The Friend Catcher | |
1983-07-18 | The Birthday Party | Hee Haw | |
1983-08-01 | The Wolfgang Press | The Burden of Mules | |
1983-09-01 | Modern English | Someone's Calling | |
1983-09-01 | This Mortal Coil | Song to the Siren | |
1983-09-19 | Xmal Deutshland | Incubus Succubus II | |
1983-11-07 | Cocteau Twins | Sunburst and Snowblind | |
1983-11-07 | Colourbox | Colourbox | |
1984-01-01 | Modern English | Chapter 12 | [5] |
1984-02-06 | Modern Engish | Rocochet Days | |
1984-03-01 | Colourbox | Say You | |
1984-04-02 | Cocteau Twins | The Spangle Maker | |
1984-06-04 | Colourbox | Punch | |
1984-06-25 | Xmal Deutshland | Tocsin | |
1984-08-01 | This Mortal Coil | Kangaroo | |
1984-08-13 | The Wolfgang Press | Scarecrow | |
1984-10-01 | This Mortal Coil | It'll End in Tears | |
1985-03-04 | Cocteau Twins | Aikea-Guinea | [6] |
1985-03-04 | The Wolfgang Press | Water | |
1985-05-01 | Clan of Xymox | A Day | |
1985-07-01 | Clan of Xymox | Clan of Xymox | |
1985-07-01 | Dif Juz | Extractions | |
1985-07-15 | The Wolfgang Press | The Legendary Wolfgang Press and Other Tall Stories | |
1985-07-22 | The Wolfgang Press | Sweatbox | |
1985-08-05 | Colourbox | The Moon Is Blue | |
1985-08-12 | Colourbox | Colourbox | |
1985-11-01 | Cocteau Twins | Time Dynamine | |
1985-11-01 | Cocteau Twins | Echoes in a Shallow Bay | |
1986-01-13 | Cocteau Twins | The Pink Opaque | [7] |
1986-01-13 | Richenel | L'esclave Endormi | |
1986-04-01 | The Bulgarian State Radio & Television Female Vocal Choir | Le mystere de voix bulgares, Vol. 1 | |
1986-04-07 | Colourbox | Baby I Love You So | |
1986-04-14 | Cocteau Twins | Victorialand | |
1986-04-21 | Colourbox | The Official Colourbox World Cup Theme | |
1986-05-01 | The Wolfgang Press | Standing Up Straight | |
1986-09-01 | Dead Can Dance | Spleen and Ideal | |
1986-09-08 | This Mortal Coil | Come Here My Love / Drugs | |
1986-09-22 | This Mortal Coil | Filigree & Shadow | |
1986-10-13 | Cocteau Twins | Love's Easy Tears | |
1986-11-01 | Clan of Xymox | Medusa | |
1986-11-10 | Cocteau Twins and Harold Budd | The Moon and the Melodies | |
1987-01-05 | Throwing Muses | Throwing Muses | [8] |
1987-01-12 | Throwing Muses | Chains Changed | |
1987-04-06 | The Wolfgang Press | Big Sex | |
1987-06-15 | Various artists | Lonely Is an Eyesore | |
1987-07-27 | Dead Can Dance | Within the Realm of a Dying Sun | |
1987-08-03 | M/A/R/R/S | Pump Up the Volume | |
1987-09-28 | Pixies | Come On Pilgrim | |
1987-10-05 | Frazier Chorus | Sloppy Heart | |
1987-10-12 | Pieter Nooten and Michael Brook | Sleeps with the Fishes | |
1987-11-01 | Clan of Xymox | Blind Hearts | |
1988-02-22 | The Bulgarian State Radio & Television Female Vocal Choir | Le mystere de voix bulgares, Vol. 2 | [9] |
1988-03-21 | Pixies | Surfer Rosa | |
1988-03-21 | Pixies | Surfer Rosa & Come On Pilgrim | |
1988-03-21 | Throwing Muses | House Tornado / The Fat Skier | |
1988-04-25 | Gilbert and Lewis | "8" Time | |
1988-08-22 | The Wolfgang Press | King of Soul | |
1988-08-22 | Pixies | Gigantic / River Euphrates | |
1988-08-22 | Ultra Vivid Scene | She Screamed | |
1988-09-19 | Cocteau Tiwns | Blue Bell Knoll | |
1988-10-24 | Dead Can Dance | The Serpent's Egg | |
1988-10-31 | Ultra Vivid Scene | Ultra Vivid Scene | |
1988-11-07 | The Wolfgang Press | Bird Wood Cage | |
1989-01-23 | Throwing Muses | Hunkpapa | [10] |
1989-02-13 | Throwing Muses | Dizzy | |
1989-03-20 | Pixies | Monkey Gone to Heaven | |
1989-04-17 | Pixies | Doolittle | |
1989-04-24 | Ultra Vivid Scene | Mercy Seat | |
1989-05-02 | The Wolfgang Press | Raintime | |
1989-06-01 | Pixies | Here Comes Your Man | |
1989-07-10 | The Birthday Party | Mutiny / The Bad See E.P. | |
1989-09-04 | Ultra Vivid Scene | Something to Eat | |
1989-09-18 | Pale Saints | Barging into the Presence of God | |
1989-10-09 | Lush | Scar | |
1990-02-12 | Pale Saints | The Comforts of Madness | [11] |
1990-02-26 | Lush | Mad Love | |
1990-04-09 | Ultra Vivid Scene | Staring at the Sun | |
1990-05-07 | Ultra Vivid Scene | Joy 1979–1990 | |
1990-05-29 | The Breeders | Pod | |
1990-06-11 | Dead Can Dance | Aion | |
1990-06-25 | His Name Is Alive | Livonia | |
1990-07-16 | Pixies | Velouria | |
1990-08-13 | Pixies | Bossanova | |
1990-08-28 | Cocteau Twins | Iceblink Luck | |
1990-09-17 | Cocteau Twins | Heaven or Las Vegas | |
1990-10-15 | Lush | Sweetness and Light | |
1990-10-22 | Pixies | Dig for Fire | |
1990-10-29 | Pale Saints | Half-Life | |
1990-11-12 | Ultra Vivid Scene | Special One | |
1990-12-03 | Lush | Gala | |
1991-01-07 | Pale Saints | Mrs. Dolphin | [12] |
1991-01-28 | Throwing Muses | Counting Backwards | |
1991-02-18 | Throwing Muses | The Real Ramona | |
1991-04-02 | The Wolfgang Press | Time | |
1991-04-08 | Spirea X | Chlorine Dream | |
1991-04-08 | This Mortal Coil | You and Your Sister | |
1991-04-22 | This Mortal Coil | BLood | |
1991-05-13 | The Wolfgang Press | Mama Told Me Not to Come | |
1991-05-20 | Spirea X | Speed Reaction | |
1991-05-28 | Pixies | Planet of Sound | |
1991-06-24 | Pale Saints | Flesh Balloon | |
1991-07-25 | Heidi Berry | Love | |
1991-08-05 | The Wolfgang Press | Queer | |
1991-09-09 | His Name Is Alive | Home Is in Your Head | |
1991-09-23 | Pixies | Trompe le monde | |
1991-10-07 | Lush | Black Spring | |
1991-10-14 | Dead Can Dance | A Passage in Time | |
1991-10-28 | Spirea X | Fireblade Skies | |
1991-11-04 | Cocteau Twins | Cocteau Twins Singles Collection | |
1991-11-04 | Throwing Muses | Not Too Soon | |
1991-12-31 | Lush | For Love | |
1992-01-01 | Various artists | Lilliput | [13] |
1992-01-27 | Lush | Spooky | |
1992-03-23 | Pale Saints | In Ribbons | |
1992-04-06 | The Breeders | Safari | |
1992-04-20 | His Name Is Alive | The Dirt Eaters | |
1992-05-11 | Pale Saints | Throwing Back the Apple | |
1992-05-18 | The Wolfgang Press | A Girl Like You | |
1992-06-01 | Michael Brook | Cobalt Blue | |
1992-06-29 | Michael Brook | Live at the Aquarium | |
1992-06-29 | Belly | Slow Dust EP | |
1992-07-20 | Swallow | Blow | |
1992-07-20 | Throwing Muses | Firepile | |
1992-08-10 | Throwing Muses | Red Heaven | |
1992-08-17 | Unrest | Imperial F.F.R.R. | |
1992-09-14 | Red House Painters | Down Colorful Hill | |
1992-09-28 | Swallow | Blowback | |
1992-10-06 | Underground Lovers | Leaves Me Blind | |
1992-10-12 | The Birthday Party | Hits | |
1992-10-09 | Belly | Gepetto | |
1992-11-16 | Ultra Vivid Scene | Rev | |
1992-11-16 | Throwing Muses | The Curse | |
1992-11-16 | In Camera | 13 (Lucky for Some) |
The Magnificent Thad Jones, Vol. 3
[edit]The Magnificent Thad Jones, Vol. 3 | |
---|---|
Studio album by |
The Magnificent Thad Jones, Vol. 3 is an album by American jazz trumpeter Thad Jones primarily recorded on February 2, 1957 and released on Blue Note later that year.
Reception
[edit]AllMusic gave the album four stars.[14]
Audio Magazine [1]
Mark Stryker of the Detroit Free Press called The Magnificent Thad Jones, Vol. 3—along with Detroit–New York Junction and The Magnificent Thad Jones—"The highlights of Jones’ early discography".[15]
Track listing
[edit]All tracks are written by Thad Jones, except as noted.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Slipped Again" | ||
2. | "Ill Wind" | Arlen*, Koehler |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Thadrack" | ||
2. | "Let's" | ||
3. | "I've Got a Crush on You" | Gershwin* |
Personnel
[edit]Musicians
[edit]July 14, 1956 ("I've Got a Crush on You")
[edit]- Thad Jones – trumpet
- Barry Harris – piano
- Percy Heath – bass
- Max Roach – drums
- Thad Jones – trumpet
February 2, 1957
[edit]- Benny Powell – trombone
- Gigi Gryce – alto saxophone
- Tommy Flanagan – piano
- George Duvivier – bass
- Elvin Jones – drums
Technical personnel
[edit]- Alfred Lion – producer
- Rudy Van Gelder – recording engineer
- Harold Feinstein – design
- Francis Wolff – photography
The Fabulous Fats Navarro, Vol. 1 & 2
[edit]The Fabulous Fats Navarro | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1957 | |||
Recorded |
| |||
Genre | Bebop | |||
Length | 36:07 | |||
Label | Blue Note BLP 1531 (Vol. 1) BLP 1532 (Vol. 2) | |||
Fats Navarro chronology | ||||
| ||||
The Fabulous Fats Navarro | ||||
The Fabulous Fats Navarro, Vols. 1 & 2 are a pair of separate but related albums by American jazz trumpeter Fats Navarro compiling four sessions he recorded for Blue Note between 1947–1949 and released in 1957.[16] Material for the album came from record dates with a variety of musicians including Tadd Dameron, Ernie Henry, Wardell Gray, Charlie Rouse, Bud Powell, and Howard McGhee.[17][18]
Reception
[edit]Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic (Vol. 1) | [17] |
AllMusic (Vol. 2) | [18] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Vol. 1) | [19] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Vol. 2) | [19] |
The Penguin Guide to Jazz (Vol. 1) | [20] |
The Penguin Guide to Jazz | [20] |
Jazz critic Stephen Cook described Navarro as a "fluid and inventive bebop trumpeter" and considered the album "an essential title for jazz enthusiasts."[21]
According to jazz critic Stephen Cook, "Navarro runs the gamut here, turning in both high-flying solos and gracefully cool statements." He noted that the track listing and personnel of the album had varied between releases.[22]
The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings awarded albums a full 4 stars and a "crown", calling them "one of the peaks of the bebop movement and one of the essential modern-jazz records."[20]
Critic John Fordham described the two volumes as "essential Navarro, and essential bebop generally, featuring a string of dazzling themes illuminated by the trumpeter's glowing tone."[23]
Author Tom Piazza stated that the albums "show instantly what set Dameron's work apart," and commented: "Among bebop dates, these were really something special, full of carefully worked-out ensembles, introductions, and codas, yet still with plenty of stretching room for the soloists."[24]
Saxophonist and writer Benny Green noted Dameron's "ravishing tone" and "precise delivery," and called the recordings "a reminder of the grace of one of the earliest modern pioneers, a grace that was precocious because in the 1940s modernists had still not formulated their own conventions."[25]
Track listing
[edit]The Fabulous Fats Navarro, Volume 1
[edit]All tracks are written by Tadd Dameron, except as noted.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Our Delight" (alternate take) | 3:09 |
2. | "Our Delight" | 3:00 |
3. | "The Squirrel" (alternate take) | 3:22 |
4. | "The Squirrel" | 3:01 |
5. | "The Chase" (alternate take) | 2:59 |
6. | "The Chase" | 2:46 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Wail" (alternate take) | Bud Powell | 2:44 |
2. | "Bouncing with Bud" (alternate take) | Powell | 3:16 |
3. | "Double Talk" |
| 5:35 |
4. | "Dameronia" (alternate take) | 3:15 | |
5. | "Dameronia" | 3:00 |
The Fabulous Fats Navarro, Volume 2
[edit]All tracks are written by Tadd Dameron, unless otherwise stated.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Lady Bird" (alternate take) | 2:53 |
2. | "Lady Bird" | 2:52 |
3. | "Jahbero" (alternate take) | 3:03 |
4. | "Jahbero" | 2:56 |
5. | "Symphonette" (alternate take) | 3:07 |
6. | "Symphonette" | 3:09 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Double Talk" (alternate take) |
| 5:22 |
2. | "Bouncing with Bud" (alternate take) | Bud Powell | 3:07 |
3. | "Dance of the Infidels" (alternate take) | Powell | 2:52 |
4. | "The Skunk" (alternate take) | McGhee, Navarro | 2:59 |
5. | "Boperation" |
| 3:07 |
- "Bouncing With Bud" (alternate take) (Bud Powell) – 3:07[26]
- "Dance Of The Infidels" (alternate take) (Powell) – 2:52
1989 CD reissues
[edit]No. | Title | Date recorded | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "The Chase" (alternate take) | September 26, 1947 | |
2. | "The Chase" | September 26, 1947 | |
3. | "The Squirrel" (alternate take) | September 26, 1947 | |
4. | "The Squirrel" | September 26, 1947 | |
5. | "Our Delight" (alternate take) | September 26, 1947 | |
6. | "Our Delight" | September 26, 1947 | |
7. | "Dameronia" (alternate take) | September 26, 1947 | |
8. | "Dameronia" | September 26, 1947 | |
9. | "Sid's Delight" | January 18, 1949 | |
10. | "Casbah" | January 18, 1949 | |
11. | "John's Delight" | April 21, 1949 | |
12. | "What's New" | April 21, 1949 | |
13. | "Heaven's Doors Are Wide Open" | April 21, 1949 | |
14. | "Focus" | April 21, 1949 |
No. | Title | Date recorded | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "The Skunk" (LP master) | October 11, 1948 | 2:54 |
2. | "Boperation" | October 11, 1948 | 2:55 |
3. | "The Skunk" (78 master) | October 11, 1948 | 3:06 |
4. | "Double Talk" | October 11, 1948 | 5:30 |
5. | "Double Talk" (alternate take) | October 11, 1948 | 5:20 |
6. | "Jahbero" (alternate take) | September 13, 1948 | 3:00 |
7. | "Jahbero" | September 13, 1948 | 2:52 |
8. | "Lady Bird" | September 13, 1948 | 2:48 |
9. | "Lady Bird" (alternate take) | September 13, 1948 | 2:50 |
10. | "Symphonette" | September 13, 1948 | 3:05 |
11. | "Symphonette" (alternate take) | September 13, 1948 | 3:03 |
12. | "I Think I'll Go Away" | September 13, 1948 | 2:45 |
Personnel
[edit]Musicians
[edit]September 26, 1947 1 1-8
[edit]- Fats Navarro – trumpet
- Ernie Henry – alto saxophone
- Charlie Rouse – tenor saxophone
- Tadd Dameron – piano
- Nelson Boyd – bass
- Shadow Wilson – drums
- recorded at WOR Studios, NYC
September 13, 1948 2 6-12
[edit]- Fats Navarro – trumpet
- Wardell Gray – tenor saxophone
- Tadd Dameron – piano
- Curley Russell – bass
- Kenny Clarke – drums
- Chano Pozo – bongos (6, 7)
- Kenny Hagood (12)
- recorded at WOR Studios, NYC
October 11, 1948 2 1-5
[edit]- Fats Navarro – trumpet
- Howard McGhee (except 2) – trumpet
- Ernie Henry – alto saxophone
- Allen Eager – tenor saxophone
- Milt Jackson (2) – vibraphone
- Milt Jackson (except 2), Howard McGhee (2) – piano
- Curley Russell – bass
- Kenny Clarke – drums
- recorded at Harry Smith Studio, NYC
January 18, 1949 1 9-10
[edit]- Fats Navarro – trumpet
- Kai Winding – trombone
- Sahib Shihab – alto saxophone
- Dexter Gordon – tenor saxophone
- Cecil Payne – baritone saxophone
- John Collins – guitar
- Tadd Dameron – piano
- Curley Russell – bass
- Kenny Clarke – drums
- Vidal Bolado – congas
- Diego Ibarra – bongos
- Rae Pearl – vocals (10)
- recorded in NYC
April 21, 1949 1 11-14
[edit]- Miles Davis – trumpet
- J. J. Johnson – trombone
- Benjamin Lundy – tenor saxophone
- Cecil Payne – baritone saxophone
- Tadd Dameron – piano
- Curley Russell – bass
- Kenny Clarke – drums
- Kay Penton – vocals (13)
- recorded in NYC
Technical personnel
[edit]- Alfred Lion – producer
- Doug Hawkins (1947, September 13, 1948), Harry Smith (October 11, 1948) – recording engineer
- Reid Miles – design
- Francis Wolff – photography
- Leonard Feather – liner notes
Reissue
[edit]- Michael Cuscuna – producer
- Ron McMaster – digital transfers
Socratic method
[edit]Before Socrates gives his speech, he asks some questions of Agathon regarding the nature of love.
First, he asks Agathon whether it is reasonable for someone to desire what they already have, like for example someone who is in perfect health to wish he were healthy (200a–e). Agathon agrees with Socrates that this would be irrational, but is quickly reminded of his own definition of Love's true desires: youth and beauty. Putting the two together then, for Love to desire youth he must not have it himself, thus making him old, and for him to desire beauty, he himself must be ugly. Agathon has no choice but to agree.
Socrates then relates a story he was told by a wise woman called Diotima. According to her, Eros is not a god but is a spirit that mediates between humans and their objects of desire. Love itself is not wise or beautiful but is the desire for those things. Love is expressed through propagation and reproduction: either physical love or the exchanging and reproducing of ideas. The greatest knowledge, Diotima says, is knowledge of the "form of beauty", which humans must try to achieve.
Diotima of Mantinea
[edit]In a departure from the earlier dialogues, Socrates switches from dialectical exchange to storytelling.[27] Socrates tells of a conversation he had with Diotima, who plays the same inquiring/instructing role that Socrates played with Agathon.
Origins of Love
[edit]Diotima first explains that Love is neither a god, as was previously claimed by the other guests, nor a mortal but a daemon, a spirit halfway between god and man. He was born during a banquet thrown by the gods to celebrate the birth of Aphrodite. One of the guests, Porus, (Ancient Greek: Πόρος, transl. 'Contrivance', lit. 'Resource', 'Plenty')—son of Metis (Ancient Greek: Μῆτις, romanized: Mêtis, lit. 'Wisdom', 'Skill', or 'Craft')—who was passed out from drinking too much nectar, and it so happened that another deity arrived, Poverty, who came to the banquet to beg, and upon seeing Porus lying unconscious took the chance to sleep with him, conceiving a child in the process: Love. Having been conceived at Aphrodite's birthday party, he became her follower and servant, but through his real origins Love acquired a kind of double nature. From his mother, Love became poor, ugly, and with no place to sleep (203c–d), while from his father he inherited the knowledge of beauty, as well as the cunningness to pursue it. Being of an intermediary nature, Love is also halfway between wisdom and ignorance, knowing just enough to understand his ignorance and try to overcome it. Beauty then is the perennial philosopher, the "lover of wisdom" (the Greek word "philia" being one of the four words for love).
After describing Love's origins, that provide clues to its nature, Diotima asks Socrates why is it, as he had previously agreed, that love is always that "of beautiful things" (204b). For if love affects everyone indiscriminately, then why is it that only some appear to pursue beauty throughout their lives? Socrates does not have the answer and so Diotima reveals it: Beauty is not the end but the means to something greater, the achievement of a certain reproduction and birth (206c), the only claim that mortals can have on immortality. This is true for men as well as animals that seek an appropriate place to give birth, preferring to roam in pain until they find it. Some men are pregnant in body alone and, just like animals, enjoy the company of women with whom they can have children that will pass on their existence. Others are pregnant in both body and mind, and instead of children they carry wisdom, virtue, and above all, the art of civic order (209a). Beauty is also their guide, but it will be towards the knowledge needed to accomplish their spiritual births.
In conclusion, Diotima gives Socrates a guide on how a man of this class should be brought up from a young age. First, he should start by loving a particular body he finds beautiful, but as time goes by, he will relax his passion and pass to the love of all bodies. From this point, he will pass to the love of beautiful minds, and then to that of knowledge. Finally, he will reach the ultimate goal, which is to witness beauty in itself, rather than representations (211a-b), the true Form of Beauty in Platonic terms.
This speech, in the interpretation of Marsilio Ficino in De Amore (1484), is the origin of the concept of Platonic love.
References
[edit]- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The official website for independent record label 4AD". 4AD. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ Thad Jones - The Magnificent Thad Jones, Vol. 3 Album Reviews, Songs & More | AllMusic, retrieved 2024-01-19
- ^ Stryker, Mark. "Thad Jones: 50 years of big band jazz in present tense". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved 2024-01-19.
- ^ "Fats Navarro Discography". www.jazzdisco.org. Retrieved 2023-12-28.
- ^ a b Fats Navarro - The Fabulous Fats Navarro, Vol. 1 Album Reviews, Songs & More | AllMusic, retrieved 2023-12-28
- ^ a b Fats Navarro - The Fabulous Fats Navarro, Vol. 2 Album Reviews, Songs & More | AllMusic, retrieved 2023-12-28
- ^ a b Larkin, Colin, ed. (2006). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Vol. 6. Oxford University Press. p. 131.
- ^ a b c Cook, Richard; Morton, Brian (1994). The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD, LP and Cassette. Penguin Books. pp. 964–965.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Allmusic
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Fats Navarro - The Fabulous Fats Navarro, Vol. 2 Album Reviews, Songs & More | AllMusic, retrieved 2023-12-28
- ^ Fordham, John (1993). Jazz on CD: The Essential Guide. Kyle Cathie Limited. p. 208.
- ^ Piazza, Tom (1995). The Guide to Classic Recorded Jazz. University of Iowa Press. p. 69.
- ^ Green, Benny (1973). Drums in My Ears. Davis-Poynter. p. 34.
- ^ The masters from this session were released under Bud Powell's name for the album The Amazing Bud Powell
- ^ Vlastos, Gregory. Socrates: Ironist and Moral Philosopher (p. 33). Cambridge University Press. Kindle Edition.
Category:Fats Navarro albums
Category:Blue Note Records albums
Category:1957 albums