Tag Frank Sinatra

“Without A Prayer”

I really liked this post on Psychology Today’s humanist blog by the president of the American Humanist Association, Dave Niose. The post reprints a letter written by an atheist father to his 11-year-old daughter explaining why he doesn’t believe in prayer. The context of the post explains that the man is married to a Christian and their child is being brought up with religion, and the girl was upset with her father when he said he would not pray for her. His letter is both thoughtful and instructive, illustrating plainly and clearly why prayer is misguided and why he chooses to ground his life in the real world rather than the magical and supernatural one:

Therefore, when you ask me to pray for you (or for anything else), I don’t want you to misunderstand me when I say that I won’t do it. I simply do not believe that prayer works, or that it makes any sense. Nature works according to natural laws, not magic. The idea of a man in the sky who takes requests from 7 billion people just seems silly to me. No such man would ignore the prayers of billions of suffering, innocent people while granting the prayers of those who ask for iPods, or to win soccer games, or pass tests.

So I hope you understand, and I hope you can respect my views. Of course, even though I’m not praying for you, I very much hope good things happen to you! I also want you to help make the world a better place, a place where there is much more peace and much less suffering. That will happen not by praying for it, but by working hard to make it happen. You can make the world better by paying attention to the the natural, not the supernatural, and leaving magic to fairy tales.

I also came across this image of Frank Sinatra and some quotes from him about religion, as well as some similar banner-style images of other celebrities via this post at The Friendly Atheist. The banners come from the “New Atheism” group Truth-Saves.com. Typical of the more confrontational style of “New Atheists”, Truth-Saves is a bit more direct in their opposition to Christianity, including organizing college students and voters . Their banners are along the same intentions as the now-famous “atheist bus ads”: attempting to de-stigmatize atheism by directly challenging the assumptions of religious people. The discussion at Friendly Atheist about the banners links to this 1963 Playboy interview with The Chairman of the Board (don’t worry, the link is only the text of the interview), wherein Ol’ Blue Eyes really lays it out in a way that seems exceptionally brave for the time. Some of the FA commenters have pointed out that some of the other celebrity comments are taken out of context and probably misrepresent the actual religious beliefs of those celebs (notably Natalie Portman and Jon Stewart), but Sinatra had no use at all for religion.

And the Flying Spaghetti Monster would like to remind you of some things that atheists never do.

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1001 Albums To Hear Before You Die, Unless You Live In America

1001 albums

A few years ago there was a best-selling book called “100 Places To See Before You Die”. Next thing you know, there are a hundred copy-cat books with similar lists of things you have to do before you die, which, if you actually tried to do them all would probably kill you from exhaustion. One such book was 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.

This book breaks things down by decade beginning with the 1950s — “In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning” by Frank Sinatra tops that decade’s list (and rightly so, I might add) — right up through the year the book was originally published (2003), with updates for every year since, including some disputed changes as this decade’s music has fleshed out.

Like any sort of attempt at a “Best Of” anything list, there’s plenty to argue about — the biases of the people doing the compiling, the relative merits of this or that particular artist or piece of work, and so on — all of which needs to be kept in mind when trying to come to terms with such a list. Still, any such list that was put together sincerely and thoughtfully will usually provide you with a fair-or-better primer, and I think this list is no exception.

This web page tries to step it up a notch: it has the entire list of 1001 albums (minus the commentary and other additional material found in the book) and a link to each one on the streaming music website Spotify.com How awesome is that, right? Let’s start listening to them all right now! How long could it take to crank through a thousand albums, a few weeks? Well, hold your horses, cowboy — Spotify isn’t available to users in the U.S. because they don’t have a licensing agreement with the good ol’ RIAA. Frankly, I laughed out loud to see this list of “must-hear” albums and then discover that I wasn’t allowed to hear them.

Which is not to say that you can’t get this music online. Perish the thought! Here, for example, is a BitTorrent of the book’s 1950s list, all conveniently zipped together into a 1.7GB download. There are a few other similar torrents as well, not to mention that you can almost certainly find every single album individually if you look hard enough. Kudos to the person who took the time to find all the Spotify links; it doesn’t appear that anyone’s taken the time to do so, but I’d bet that if you spent the time with a site like Last.fm or Pandora you could probably go a long way to building a similar set of links on those services.

Me, I’m still hoping to get through 1001 Things To Eat Before You Die.

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It’s STILL Frank’s World, And We Are Just Living In It

Believe it or not, I still occasionally buy actual music CDs instead of just skimming whatever I want off the web. My tastes in music aren’t exactly the same as those of the teen- and twenty-somethings who dominate the music download world, so sometimes it’s hard to find some of the artists I like among the scads of BitTorrents and other online music sharing.  And sometimes I still just like to have the physical CD — owning books, CDs, DVDs and other physical manifestations of content is an artifact of the pre-online life that people my age and older will probably never shake off 100%.

We were at the local Barnes & Noble last weekend engaging in a little impulse retail therapy, mostly oohing and ahhing over some DVD box sets of classic Hollywood musicals, when I picked up the Frank Sinatra album “Only The Lonely” because it was on sale for only $10 with our membership card.  The music critic on CBS’s “Sunday Morning” show had mentioned it in his piece about the Grammy Awards as being perhaps Sinatra’s best album, and, though I have a number of Sinatra albums, this one was not part of my collection.  Sinatra isn’t hard to find online, but owning Sinatra albums seems like the “right” way to do it.

FWIW, though this is a really beautiful album, “In The Wee Small Hours” is still his best as far as I am concerned.

I did not watch the Grammy Awards that evening, but I did see a brief clip of the duet between Alicia Keyes and Ol’ Blue Eyes  as the opening number, a la “Unforgettable” years ago with Natalie and Nat King Cole.  They used previously unseen footage of Sinatra singing “Learnin’ The Blues”, while Keyes played piano and sang live on stage.  “Only The Lonely” was one of the albums nominated for Album Of The Year the very first year the Grammys were awarded, and this year marks the 50th anniversary of both.

Though Frank Sinatra never really goes out of style, his legend does wax and wane from time to time.  We’ve been in a bit of a lull Sinatra-wise for the last several years, but it looks like he’s ready to take a swing at it again.  Here’s your chance to bone up on some key Rat Pack-style lingo so you won’t be left out in the cold when Frankie’s hot again.

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