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Music from the Museum

The Fiddler, ambrotype c.1858

New! Janus Museum Radio

Listen in to our webmaster, Tibor Szégy-Légy, as he presents a wide-ranging program of some of his favorite music.

Program 3 in our new series - Outlaws and Bad Persons

Program 9 - Music from the Civil War for Decoration Day

Program 8 - Jazz, harp, and hurdy-gurdy.



We're pleased to feature tunes from The Janus Museum's extensive music library. Every week - or more often as the spirit moves, we'll feature a tune, song, or sound from the collection in streaming Real Audio format.

Our Current Selection

The Red Clay Ramblers sing
Jim Canaan's from their album It Ain't Right.



Previous Musical Selections



Here's an extremely rare treasure, a 78 rpm recording of The Rocket Ranger March from the 1953 TV series Rod Brown of the Rocket Rangers These may be the the first internet performances of The Rocket Rangers March, performed by the Rocket Rangers Chorus, and also an instrumental version of the Rocket Ranger March, performed by the Rocket Ranger Philharmonic Orchestra of Zagreb.



For Armistice Day - The Bells of Hell, from a newly reissued DVD of Richard Attenborough's Oh! What a Lovely War.



And now, a Stephen Foster song especially for the Fourth of July, Plain Old Soldier, sung by Leslie Guin. From Songs of Stephen Foster.



Here's a sprightly archaic banjo tune - Pompey Ran Away (1782) from Carson Hudson Jr.'s I Come from Old Virginny! Early Virgina Banjo Music 1790-1860, another recent find in the old-time music bin.



Here's a thumping good tune, Chasing Old Satan, from the Double Decker Stringband's fine new album, The Rest is Yet to Come.



In honor of the splendid Hésperion XXI concert we recently attended, here's Jordi Savall performing Captain Tobias Hume's A Souldiers Resolution on the viola da gamba.



To commemorate the end of legal fox hunting across the pond, here are two songs from the rich tradition of hunt songs:

Nic Jones sings Reynard the Fox from Ballads and Songs.

Oak, Ash and Thorn perform Bold Reynard from Sowing Wild OATs & Out On A Limb.



Highly Recommended




Film Reviews

We occasionally mention of some of the classic films that are shown in The Janus Museum's Fellow's Lounge - here are links to the webmaster's capsule reviews:

Aaya Toofan

Aelita, Queen of Mars

Amar Akbar Anthony

Astérix & Obélix contre César

L'Atalante

Babes in Toyland (1934), AKA March of the Wooden Soldiers

Baiju Bawra

Bajrangbali

Balram Shri Krishna

Berserk!

Body

Book and Sword

Boxer

The Brain That Wouldn't Die

Bride & Prejudice

British Intelligence

Byron

The Calamari Wrestler (Ika Resuraa)

The Call of Cthulhu

The Captain's Paradise

Catwoman

The Charge of the Light Brigade

China Gate

Chronicles of Narnia

The Clowns

Cold Comfort Farm (1995 version)

Cousin Bette

The Crawling Hand

A Dance to the Music of Time

Death in the Air (AKA Pilot X)

Drôle de Drame

Elena and Her Men, More on Elena

Enchanted

French Cancan

George Washington II: The Forging of a Nation

Giulio Cesare

Glen or Glenda

The Golden Coach

Gormenghast

H.M. Deserters (C.K. Dezerterzy)

Halaku

Har Har Mahadev

The Heart of the World

Henry V (1944 version)

Hot Fuzz

The Illusionist

Les Indes Galantes

The Indian Tomb (Das Indische Grabmal; Fritz Lang's Indian Epic)
More on The Indian Tomb

Jai Santoshi Maa

Jungle ki Nagin

Lagaan

The Living Corpse

Lola Montes

The Lost Zeppelin

Luv Kush (TV serial)

The Maggie

Mahabali Hanuman (Dara Singh, 1980)

Mahabali Hanuman (Rakesh Pandey, 1981)

Mahabharat; And another entry

Maniac

March of the Wooden Soldiers

Master and Commander

The Mikado (1939 version)

Mister Vampire 3

Münchhausen (1943)

Oh! What a Lovely War

Old Khottabych

Old School

Les Paladins

Passport to Pimlico

The Phantom Empire

The Pirates of Penzance (1980)

The Pirates of Penzance (1983)

Porco Rosso

Pride and Prejudice (2005)

Private Life of a Cat

Ramayan (TV serial)

Royal Flash

The Saddest Music in the World

Sadko

Sampoorna Ramayana (children's theater version)

Sampoorna Ramayan; Also a video segment

Seven Years Bad Luck

Shaolin Soccer

Sikander-e-Azam

Sleepy Hollow

The Legend of Suriyothai

Tarzan (1985 Bollywood version)

Teenagers From Outer Space

They Who Step on the Tiger's Tail (Tora no o wo fumu Otokotachi)

Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines

Titus

Two Comrades Were Serving (Sluzhili dva Tovarishcha)

V for Vendetta

Valiant

Wagner - The Complete Epic

Waterloo

War of the Worlds (2005)

Yahudi

Zeppelin




For Image Searchers

Many visitors to this page arrive via Google Image. Google's links are often out of date - so here are some of our most popular image searches, linked to their placement on the site:

Absinthe Drinker

Aelita, Queen of Mars

Bertillon Photograph

Cottages

Dara Singh, plus another shot

Eddie Carmel (the Jewish Giant)

Hoplite

Safety Poster

Slave Girl

Phantom Empire Poster (external link)

Pikeman

Russian Blue

The oddest image search, so far, is for Sweaty Women, which brings up this image, yikes. Go figure...




News & Comment

City Journal

DEBKAfile

Thomas Friedman

History News Network

Jane's Information Group

New York Times

The New Yorker

Oliphant

Salon

Slate

Washington Post

Weekly Piracy Report



Weblogs and Filters

Achenblog

Airminded

ArtsJournal

Arts & Letters Daily

BibliOdyssey

Lilek's Bleat

Boing Boing

Brass Goggles

Cephalopodcast

Chase me Ladies, I'm in the Cavalry

Juan Cole

Collateral Damage

Combat Helmets of the 20th Century

Command Post

Comics Curmudgeon

Cooked Books

Cool Tools

Cottage Renovations

Cronaca

Cul de Sac

Cute Overload

Daffodil Field

Daily Kos

DC Blogs

Defense Tech

Fausta's Blog

Fed by Birds

FuturePundit.com

Gizmodo

Grow-a-Brain

Hand Eye Paint

Hullabaloo

Instapundit

Intel Dump

J-Walk

The Kitten Channel

Language Hat

The Law West of Ealing Broadway

Little Green Footballs

Metafilter

Ministry of Minor Perfidy

Mirabilis

Notes from the Technology Underground

Octopia

The Online Photographer

Oxblog

Peek (Alternet Blog)

Pharyngula

Pinky Diablo and His Singing Grubworm

Political Animal

Proceedings of the Athanasius Kircher Society

Ramage

reBlog

Ref Grunt

Repository for Bottled Monsters

The Rest is Noise

Retro Thing

The Rhine River

Samizdata.net

seven years in the navey

Squid

Squidblog

Talking Points Memo

things magazine

The Tsarina of Tsocks

Your Daily Art

Winds of Change

Janus Links

Another Janus Museum

Temple of Janus by Peter Paul Rubens

Temple of Janus by H.W.B., 1883

Some Thoughts on the God Janus

Janus in Myth

More Janus in Myth

The Mystery of Janus

Emblem 18 from Andrea Alciato's Book of Emblems (1531)

Engraving of Janus from Vincenzo Cartari's Le Imagini de gli Dei (1608)

Janus and Athena

Mars, Janus, and Minerva

Janus Galleries

The Art of Katherine Janus Kahn

Janus Great Danes

The Society of Janus (not connected with The Janus Museum)


Photography

The American Museum of Photography

Eugene Atget at George Eastman House

Atget at the International Center of Photography

Civil War Photographs from the Library of Congress

The Daguerreian Society

The George Eastman House

Kathleen Ewing Gallery (represents the Janus Estate)

Helios - Photography at the National Museum of American Art

Klotz/Sirmon Gallery

Robin Schwartz

Star Camera Company


Music

Alan Lomax Archive

Archeophone Records

Archie Edward's Blues Heritage Foundation

Blues on Air

Classical Music Archives

Classical MIDI Connection

Concertzender Radio

Dr. Horsehair

Hackmann Hurdy-Gurdies

honkingduck.com

John Fahey

Magnatune

Joe Bussard's vintage 78s

Max Hunter Folk Song Collection

Music by Michael Starke

Old-Time Music Homepage

Phonozoic

Roots of Folk: Old English, Scots, and Irish Songs and Tunes (Bruce Olson's Web Site)

Smithsonian Folkways Recordings

Sugar in the Gourd

Weenie Campbell


History & Reference

American Civil War Portal

American Memory - Library of Congress

CivilWar@Smithsonian

Common-Place

Cyber Times Navigator (New York Times)

Government Information Awareness

The Great War in a Different Light

Historical Picture Collections

ibiblio

Making of America

Moving Image Archive

New York Public Library Digital Gallery

Online Books Page

Open Video Project

Proceedings of the Old Bailey 1674-1834

Repositories of Primary Sources

David Rumsey Map Collection

SIRIS - Smithsonian Institution Research Information System

Statistical Abstract of the United States

Studies in Intelligence

Voice of the Shuttle


Favorites

5ives

Amusing Seaches

The Apothecary's Drawer

Big Meadows (Virginia) Webcam

Bookworm Game

Cat of the Day

Coconino World

Coudal Partners

Ferd'nand

Framley Museum

Golden Age Comic Cover Gallery

Jesus of the Week

Lawsonomy

Mars Attacks

Macaroni and cheese recipes

Mutts - the Official Site

Mutts Online

Patrick O'Brian Web Resources

Pepys' Diary

Sodaplay

The Tasarina of Tsocks

Washington Grove Pacer Farm

webplayer

Recent photographs, commentary, and links from The Janus Museum's webmaster, Tibor Szégy-Légy

Every now and again you stumble on a weblog that seems to perfectly encapsulate a way of life, an environment, people, characters, whatever (although the Janus Museum is not all it seems, we think).

--- things magazine




3 May - Feline Augmented Literacy

Miraculous Cat Reading

Here's the latest cat-related ex voto - a commemoration of a miraculous intervention -
currently on offer through May 9th on eBay. And the translation of the inscription, as supplied by the seller:
I readed stories to my daughter since she was a very little girl but when she learned to read she didn't wanted to do it by herself, I had the good idea of tell her that she have to read to the cats because they couldn't do it, and she began to read stories to them and the cats looked facinated with the sound of her voice, she began to read them each day and they heared attentive as if they were understanding. I thanks to the Virgen de Guadalupe for the miracle.
Very fine, and even if you're already pretty literate, reading to your cats would be a pleasant way to spend an evening. What should you read to your cats? Jenny and the Cat Club is always popular, but I recommend Katherine Rogers The Cat and the Human Imagination - Max and Maxine found it absolutely facinating. Both are available through the Janus Museum Museum Shop, of course.

Previous cat-related ex votos featured here:

Pretty Hairy Kittens Miracle
Demonic Fear of Kitties
Cat Scratch Fever Miracle
Miracle of the Cat Husband
The Miracle of the Embarrassed Cats
Tragic Love
Canción de los Gatos
San Pascual's Cat
Aunt Honorata's Cats
The Perfect Cat Storm
Cat Pi Milagro
Greedy-guts Miracle Cat

link


2 May - Our Summer Blockbuster

Still from 'Giant Squid vs. Cat II'
Natasha menaced in Giant Squid vs. Cat II

Very pleased to premiere the Janus Museum Video Unit's own summer blockbuster, Giant Squid vs. Cat II, the long-awaited sequel to our
rapturously reviewed, incredibly successful 2006 feature, Giant Squid vs. Cat - viewed over 170,000 times on Youtube. And now, Giant Squid vs. Cat II:




I would like to emphasize that no cats were harmed during the making of Giant Squid vs. Cat II.

link


2 May - The Lameness of the Season

Max Gray with the Famous Janus Museum Azaleas

The famous Janus Museum azaleas are now in bloom, and the bus tours are upon us to view them. I ran into that edgy young photographer
Max Gray while I was manning the espresso cart, waiting for the next tour group to arrive. He seemed to be grooving on the blooms, so I asked why he didn't have his camera with him. Such a look he gave me - "I don't do pretty, man", he said, which really put me in my place.

Here's coverage of azalea season last year, and in '05. Sorry if it's too pretty...

link


26 April - The New Old Footbridge

Bridgeless Creek, the Janus Museum Forest Preserve

We ventured out during a break in the monsoon the other day for our first glimpse of the new Old Footbridge - regular readers, if any, will recall how stunned we were to find the old Old Footbridge had
gone missing. Above, the site of the old Old Footbridge, now strangely bridgeless. Wallingford Creek is in full flood due to the monsoonal rains and the removal of the dam of leaves and branches that had formed under the old Old Footbridge. The new Old Footbridge can be glimpsed behind the trees to the right of the picture. I don't know why the new location was used - it'll take some getting used to, I can tell you.


Natasha on the New Old Footbridge

Cat Natasha makes the ceremonial first crossing of the new Old Footbridge. It's very well-made and solid, and now one can cross the creek without fear of wrenching one's ankle, and the danger of sudden ambush has been removed, but it does lack the rustic charm of the old Old Footbridge. Gad, the world has run mad with innovation...

I apologize for the gap in posting - I was moderating one of the sessions at the meeting of the local conference of ALTGEM, "Dealing with Unruly Curators" - pretty interesting session - the secret is not to leave visible marks.

link


20 April - Le Cochon Danseur



Since
pigs fly, why shouldn't they dance, too? This superb Pathé film dates from 1907.

link


12 April - Max Gray, Photographer, in Portrait Mode

Portrait of Natasha by Max Gray

That fascinating young Washington Grove photographer
Max Gray, whose work we've been featuring here from time to time, was in the mood for making portraits today out in The Circle, near the Historic Cottage. Above, a nice shot of Cat Natasha.


Martha and Gus, by Max Gray

And here's a rather jolly snap of Martha Norbeck-Wallingford, the Janus Museum's Director of Planned Giving, and Gus the maintenance man - Max Gray has given Martha a real Modigliani sort of vibe. Gus has once again jumped the gun on Straw Hat Day, I see.


Gus, by Max Gray

Finally, a pretty terrifying close-up of Gus. Interesting, but I think I prefer Max Gray's landscape work.

link


12 April - Christopher Smart

Christopher Smart, c.1745
Christopher Smart, c.1745, artist unknown.
National Portrait Gallery

Happy birthday (yesterday) to Christopher Smart (1722-1771), poet, friend of Samuel Johnson, and author of a work beloved of cat owners, For I Will Consider My Cat Jeoffry, a part of his longer poem Jubilate Agno. Smart composed the poem while confined in a madhouse, Cat Jeoffry being his companion in the asylum. Here's a bit of the Jeoffry section of the poem:
For I will consider my Cat Jeoffry.
For he is the servant of the Living God duly and daily serving him.
For at the first glance of the glory of God in the East he worships in his way.
For this is done by wreathing his body seven times round with elegant quickness.
For then he leaps up to catch the musk, which is the blessing of God upon his prayer.
For he rolls upon prank to work it in.
For having done duty and received blessing he begins to consider himself.
For this he performs in ten degrees.
For first he looks upon his forepaws to see if they are clean.
For secondly he kicks up behind to clear away there.
For thirdly he works it upon stretch with the forepaws extended.
For fourthly he sharpens his paws by wood.
For fifthly he washes himself.
For sixthly he rolls upon wash.
For seventhly he fleas himself, that he may not be interrupted upon the beat.
For eighthly he rubs himself against a post.
For ninthly he looks up for his instructions.
For tenthly he goes in quest of food.
For having consider'd God and himself he will consider his neighbour.
For if he meets another cat he will kiss her in kindness...
The Janus Museum Press once offered an elegant tasteful small edition of the poem, illustrated with photographs of dear old Museum Cat Toby, about ten years ago. It's highly sought after today - we really ought to reissue it. Smart's Wikipedia entry reveals that he also was something of a proto performance artist, appearing in taverns and theaters as the midwife Mary Midnight, dressed...
...'in a high crown hat' and deliver[ing] outrageous 'oratories' or monologues about controversial topics of the day. His performances were accompanied by boisterous comedians, slapstick acts, one-legged dancers, and animal tricks...
How I wish someone had taped his act! Smart was sent to the madhouse for his religious mania - he would fall to his knees in the street and demand that strangers kneel and pray with him. Though, as Dr. Johnson said, "It is greater madness not to pray at all than to pray as Smart did... His infirmities were not noxious to society. He insisted on people praying with him; and I'd as lief pray with Kit Smart as anyone else..."

Here's Benjamin Britten's setting of Jubilate Agno, which he titled in the English - Rejoice in the Lamb (streaming MP3). Jeoffry makes his appearance about four minutes into the piece.

link


8 April - Surveillance

Natasha up a Tree

Natasha keeps an eye peeled for
our local fox. I saw him Saturday, trotting out of The Circle, with a squirrel in his mouth. And neighbors Lee and Marlene Fisher report that he was hanging out on their porch just a few minutes ago. Here's an appropriate song for the occasion - Tomorrow the Fox will come to Town (streaming MP3) by Thomas Ravenscroft, performed by the Pro Cantione Antiqua. Here's the music, in case you'd like to join in.

link


5 April - From the Collection

Union Artillery Crew, Fort Washington, MD

We haven't had a featured artifact from the Janus Museum's collections for such a long time, so here's a 1/6 plate ambrotype (collodion positive on glass) of a Federal artillery crew at
Fort Washington, Maryland, possibly made by Allan Janus. Here's another superb artillery ambrotype from Fort Washington.

link


4 April - Shocking Case of Footbridge Larceny

Dejeuner sur le Pont

Just last Sunday, we enjoyed a little picnic during our catwalk to
the Old Footbridge, our destination of choice for many years, little knowing it would be our last. 'Cos the next time we strolled over - yesterday, it was - the footbridge was missing - gone! This was the scene:


Scene of the Missing Footbridge

... With Leroy and Natasha sadly checking out the crime scene by the banks of Wallingford Creek. Well, I was aghast - the Old Footbridge, the focus of most of our catwalks, the subject of hit movies, and moving tableaux vivants - stolen. Later, a reliable source (Friend Ann Briggs) sent me this horrifing snap:


The Old Footbridge Being Purloined

... Of the actual act of the bridge theft. Actually, she says it's going to be refurbished, and a brand new Old Footbridge will soon be in place. Later, we found the old Old Footbridge, looking strangely out of place in the middle of the woods:


Misplaced Footbridge

Leroy looks a bit confused, and who can blame him? It reminds me of London Bridge transplanted to Arizona. I'm sure the new Old Footbridge will be very nice, but such memories the old Old Footbridge had for us...



Many thanks to the anonymous Friend of the Museum who made a generous contribution via our Amazon Tip Jar. I'd love to send a commemorative Janus Museum Fridge Magnet to the donor - please contact me at refdesk at janusmuseum dot org.

link


4 April - Something About Worms

Evil Worms

Friend
Mark Taylor pointed me towards this strangely compelling video from 1970 on the dangers of intestinal worms. For some reason it reminded me of an anecdote from the French Revolution. Fabre d'Églantine and Georges Danton were in the tumbril on their way to the guillotine (April 5, 1794) along with the other indulgents, the victims of Robespierre. Fabre, a poet, was mourning the verses he would never write, beheading being detrimental to poets. Danton replied, "Des vers... Avant huit jours, tu en feras plus que tu n'en voudras!" - "Before eight days have passed, you'll make more of them than you would like to!" Vers, of course, referring to either verses, or worms. Pretty good for a fellow on his way to the scaffold.

By the way, Danton was purged by Robespierre for his obstructionism on the Committee of Public Safety, relentlessly vetoing Robespierre's more bloodthirsty initiatives. Which is why Robespierre is said to have said, on hearing the news of Danton's execution, "Mais, òu sont les nays Danton?"

link


4 April - Photo Review

Max Gray, Photographer
Max Gray, Photographer

Here's an excellent review of the work of
Max Gray, that scintillating young photographer, by friend Hope Hare:
It is good to see that younger artists such as Max have begun to investigate the possibilities of photography in a post-Kantian context, without giving up their works' traditional epistemological character in favor of a verbal model of production. It has perhaps been the impressive artisanry of historical hagiography that seemed to overwhelm the metaphoric possibilities, or perhaps the metaphor itself (weight as content) was simply too obvious, but the fresh and unusually organic plasticity so evident in Max’s oeuvre not only blends with figurative styles but also injects it with local folklore. It is irradiated with a progressive, optimistic outlook, and marked by a rejection of totalizing, essentialist, foundationalist concepts.
link


3 April - Walking with Coyotes

Coyotes Ex Voto

Kind of miraculous in its timing, considering the arrival of
the Beast of the Grove, is this ex voto - a painting commemorating a miraculous intervention - recently offered on eBay. Here's the translation of the inscription:
At dusk I went to take a walk by the forest with my little daughter, and suddenly we saw that we were sorrounded by coyotes, I took in my arms to my girl and I commended us to the Virgen de Guadalupe because the animals seemed hungry, under her holy mantel I walked among the coyotes very slow and they let me go away without attacking us and I thanks with this retablo for the miracle.
link



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