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There Is a New Record for Most Bollywood Lyrics Ever Written, and Other News
By
Sadie Stein
February 18, 2016
On the Shelf
“Tu Dharti Pe Chahe Jahan Bhi Rahegi”
Lyricist Sameer Anjaan has entered
The Guinness Book of World Records
—they had to make a new category—for writing
the greatest number of Bollywood songs, ever
. By the numbers: 3,524 songs, 650 films, 33 years. Writes his biographer, “Sameer was a hit both with the fans and the singers because he wrote songs that did not require dictionary to understand. He wrote in the language of the common people.” Listen to his
top twenty-five songs
here.
In other lyrical news: Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho’s
L’Amour de loin
will premiere at the Metropolitan Opera as part of its 2016–2017 season—the first opera by a woman the company has mounted since 1903.
Female spies in seventeenth-century Northern Europe had all sorts of ingenious means of transporting information, writes historian Nadine Ackerman, author of “
Female Spies or ‘she-Intelligencers’: Towards a Gendered History of Seventeenth-Century Espionage
.” The women—who ranged from poets to bakers, aristocrats to peasants—were generally considered unsuspicious, even in times of war, and if caught did not face the capital punishment of their male counterparts. In
a pair videos
, the author re-creates several of their espionage methods: using artichokes and hollow eggs.
In many ways, we are less intrigued by
The Vatican Cookbook
revealing the Holy Father’s love of pizza than by the fact that such information is “as told by members of the Pontifical Swiss Guard.” It seems like breaking some kind of seal, or at least NDA, but no! In fact! “Polish nuns do the majority of cooking at the Vatican, but the Swiss Guard chefs do step in to make food on formal occasions or to fulfill a special request. Though a guard cooking is a rarity, these men know more about the Pope’s eating habits than anyone else, since they are no more than a few steps from him at all times.”
“What does it mean to shift overnight from a society in which people walk down the street looking around to one in which people walk down the street looking at machines?”
asks Jacob Weisberg in
The New York Review of Books
. Writing about four new books that plumb different aspects of our dependence on—ambivalent relationship to—technology, he finds that most raise more questions than they answer—we’re still living the answer in real time.
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