Please direct any questions or comments to my Talk page.
Here
 | This user has been editing Wikipedia for more than twenty years (22 years, 2 months, and 23 days). |
|
Elsewhere
 | This user plays the piano. |
|
J'accuse!
| shill | This user has been accused of being a paid worker to draw opinions. |
|
Some articles I've started
Many of these involved little effort on my part. This is more of an indicator as to where my interests lie, in case anyone's curious.
- Adama (a.k.a. Nazareth), an Ethiopian city (and my wife's hometown)
- Adriana Evans, an R&B vocalist
- Aframomum corrorima, or korarima, a spice used in berbere
- After the Heat, an album by Brian Eno and Cluster
- Ambersunshower, an R&B vocalist
- Amha Records, an Ethiopian record label from 1969 to 1975
- Between Today and Yesterday, an Alan Price album
- Blue Serge, a Serge Chaloff album
- Boston Blow–Up!, a Serge Chaloff album
- Buda, the Ethiopian term for the evil eye and werehyenas
- Caravan of Dreams, a performing arts center (which I never actually got to visit) in Fort Worth, Texas.
- Chris Connor (album)
- Cluster, a German musical group
- Conference of the Birds (Dave Holland album)
- Davina, an R&B vocalist/musician
- Dennis González, a jazz trumpeter
- Dukem, an Ethiopian village
- Durba (aka Derba), an Ethiopian town
- Eskinder Nega, an Ethiopian journalist convicted under anti-terrorism legislation
- Ethiopiques, a series of compact discs released by the Paris-based Buda Musique
- Flowers of Romance, a Public Image Ltd album
- Fred Jackson (saxophonist). (An earlier version of that page was about Fred Jackson, Jr., until I figured out they were two different musicians.)
- Greenbelt Park
- Halber Mensch, an Einstürzende Neubauten album
- The Ideal Copy, a Wire album
- I.M. Terrell High School, a former high school (and Ornette Coleman's alma mater) in Fort Worth, Texas
- In All Languages, an Ornette Coleman album
- Jay Rosen (drummer), jazz musician
- Jazzyfatnastees, an R&B vocal duo
- Jiim Sheikh Muumin, Somalian musician and actor
- Kaifa Records, an Ethiopian record label from 1973 to 1977
- Lenox Avenue Breakdown, an Arthur Blythe album
- List of "Core Collection" albums in The Penguin Guide to Jazz (deleted: AfD discusion. See Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/List of notable albums.)
- List of "Crown" albums in The Penguin Guide to Jazz (deleted: AfD discussion. See Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/List of notable albums.)
- Live at Newport '58, a Horace Silver album
- Loose Ends, an R&B band
- Mahmoud Ahmed, an Ethiopian singer
- Metal Box, a Public Image Ltd album (the Metal Box page history doesn't show my early edits, due to a re-direct along the way)
- A Modern Jazz Symposium of Music and Poetry, a Charles Mingus album
- More Soul, a Hank Crawford album
- Mulatu Teshome
- Old Hickory Lake and Old Hickory Lock and Dam
- Passion - Sources, an album compiled by Peter Gabriel (I split this off from Passion: Music for The Last Temptation of Christ)
- Percy Priest Lake and J. Percy Priest Dam
- Peter Gabriel (1980 album)
- Prince Lasha, a jazz saxophonist (his album Firebirds with Sonny Simmons is one of my favorite albums in any genre)
- The Rance Allen Group, a gospel music group who recorded for Stax Records
- Ron Wynn, an allmusic critic
- Sodere, a spa resort in Ethiopia
- Space Is the Place (soundtrack), a Sun Ra album
- Stanley Marsh 3
- Taj Mahal Travellers
- Tanbūra, a bowl lyre of the Middle East and East Africa.
- Tears for Dolphy, a Ted Curson album
- Texas State Highway Spur 580
Useful stuff
"Only a primitive would believe a word of Wikipedia." -- Tom Wolfe
- 10th ed. {{cite book|last1 = Cook|first1 = Richard|author-link1 = Richard Cook (journalist)|last2= Morton | first2=Brian | author-link2 = Brian Morton (Scottish writer)|title = The Penguin Jazz Guide: The History of the Music in the 1001 Best Albums |origyear = 1992|edition = 10th | series = [[The Penguin Guide to Jazz]]|year = 2010|publisher = Penguin|location = New York|isbn = 978-0-14-104831-4|pages = xxx}}
- 9th ed. {{cite book|last1 = Cook|first1 = Richard|author-link1 = Richard Cook (journalist)|last2= Morton | first2=Brian | author-link2 = Brian Morton (Scottish writer)|title = The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings|origyear = 1992|edition = 9th|series = [[The Penguin Guide to Jazz]]|year = 2008|publisher = Penguin|location = New York|isbn = 978-0-14-103401-0|pages = xxx}}
- 8th ed.: {{cite book|last1 = Cook|first1 = Richard|author-link1 = Richard Cook (journalist)|last2= Morton | first2=Brian | author-link2 = Brian Morton (Scottish writer)|title = The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings|origyear = 1992|edition = 9th|series = [[The Penguin Guide to Jazz]]|year = 2008|publisher = Penguin|location = New York|isbn = 978-0-14-103401-0|pages = = xxx}}
- All Music Guide to Jazz (1st ed.): {{Citation | last=Wynn | first=Ron | authorlink=Ron Wynn | editor=[[Ron Wynn]] | others=M. Erlewine, V. Bogdanov | year=1994 | title=[[All Music Guide to Jazz]] | place=San Francisco | publisher=Miller Freeman | page=xxx | isbn=0-87930-308-5}}
- Cadence Magazine
- (old) {{cite journal | last= | first= | year= | month= | title= | journal=[[Cadence Magazine]] | volume= | issue= | pages= | publisher=Cadnor Ltd. | location=[[Redwood, New York|Redwood, NY]] | issn=01626973 }}
- (new) {{cite journal | last= | first= | year= | month= | title= | journal=[[Cadence Magazine]] | volume= | issue= | pages= | publisher=Cadence Media LLC | location=[[Portland, Oregon|Portland, OR]] | issn=01626973 }}
- Jazz for Dummies (2nd ed.): <ref name="jfd">{{Cite book | title=Jazz for Dummies | last=Sutro | first=Dirk | page=240 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tqkRibY3RHoC&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&lpg=PA240&pg=PA240#v=onepage&q&f=false | series=[[For Dummies]] | edition=2nd | year=2006 | isbn=9780471768449 | accessdate={{Date|2020-03-29}} }}</ref>
- [[Wikipedia talk:Neutral point of view/Archive 42#Isn't it iconic?|Isn't it iconic?]]
- [[Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard/Archive_179#Ethiopianorthodox.org]]
- Citation method
{{Reflist|refs=
*<ref name="name1">something</ref>
*<ref name="somename">something else</ref>
...
}}