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Kuratory: Curated Curiosity

Inspiring Excitement and Passion about History and the Humanities

Suzi Digby talks 500 years of choral music in 34 minutes.

September 12, 2015October 18, 2015 [email protected] 517 views

In 2011 I met Suzi Digby via Twitter.  Having found out that she is a choral goddess and was in Los Angeles for a visiting professorship in choral conducting and arts leadership, I immediately asked if I could take her to coffee and meet her.  I visited her in Queen’s College, Cambridge, and we talked…

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Visiting Gibraltar: How to Capture a Piece of England in Spain

September 8, 2015October 18, 2015 [email protected] 1069 views

When I first arrived in Spain back in June, I wanted to go exploring – Seville, Granada (the Alhambra) – there were very few cities in Andalusia through which I didn’t want to wander. But it was summer.  And Europe was in the midst of this awful heatwave. So we planned all of our explorations based on…

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Old Music Monday: The colorful life of Francesco Maria Veracini

September 7, 2015 [email protected] 570 views

  One of the great debates in classical music right now is whether video game music should be included in the genre of classical, even when a symphony is playing it.  I’ve long been a fan of the Oblivion soundtrack, and downloaded it before these kinds of scores were available all over youtube.  ClassicFM’s website…

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The Love of History and Humanities: The Manifesto of a Passion

September 6, 2015September 6, 2015 [email protected] 410 views

Yesterday I was talking with a friend about how I’m excited to go to the Spanish Archives in Simancas, north of Madrid, where all of the letters from Eustace Chapuys are displayed. He was the Spanish Ambassador to England when Henry VIII was giving the middle finger to the Pope in order to marry Anne Boleyn,…

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The Week in Books: Mary Queen of Scots wasn’t Actually a Catholic Martyr

September 3, 2015 [email protected] 576 views

I’ve been working on a podcast about Mary Queen of Scots, which I’ll be recording this week, and as part of that I’ve been reading John Guy’s book, Queen of Scots (available to read on Oyster, too).  Most people who know Elizabethan history are familiar with the story of the tragic Catholic queen, but you don’t really ever…

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Writing About Reading and Writing: The Netgalley Experiment

September 2, 2015 [email protected] 369 views

I’ve posted before about my experiment with my own memoir, Fragile, and Perfectly Cracked, my story of giving birth to a stillborn son as well as dealing with subsequent infertility problems.  It was a labor of love for me to get this out there.  I’m currently working on my first novel, which involves time travel (because…

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Favorite Places and Spaces: Soho in London

September 1, 2015October 25, 2015 [email protected] 837 views

When I lived in London, I worked at 76 Brewer Street, on the end of Soho near Golden Square, on the eastern end, tucked away from the tourists of Piccadilly, Leicester Square, and Oxford Street on all sides, a neighborhood of its own.  What used to be a hunting ground where Henry VIII would ride…

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Old Music Monday: Biber’s Resurrection Sonata

August 31, 2015 [email protected] 472 views

There’s something about Baroque music that just screams Autumn to me.  I don’t know where it comes from – I suppose the main baroque music my family listened to growing up would have been a recording of the Messiah which would begin its heavy Christmas rotation soon after Halloween, so perhaps there’s some kind of…

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launching the bigworld tour company, and why I love early choral music

August 30, 2015 [email protected] 417 views

This year I am embarking on a new project as an entrepreneur who leads cultural tours to England, specializing in trips to listen to great choral services in cathedrals.  My dear friend Jim and I are building a tour company, our first trip is scheduled for May 2016, and I’ve been working on the itinerary.  What a fun…

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Random Friday Fun Facts: The South Sea Bubble

August 27, 2015 [email protected] 383 views

Fair warning – I am sitting in an airport in Berlin as I write this. It’s 9am local time and I’ve been here for almost two hours on a layover waiting to go back to Spain after an overnight flight during which time I didn’t sleep, but I did watch Tammy with Melissa McCarthy, which…

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About:

This blog is dedicated to history and the humanities, and is designed to inspire you to try new things: interests, books, music, even places. I operate with two guiding principles:
1) History, classical music, libraries, museums, etc, are filled with life and tell their stories of human passions; and
2) Everyone can be be more connected to each other, and the great web of humanity in which we find ourselves, by exploring these subjects.
Learn more on the About Page

your intrepid explorer (and her mom)

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