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Tim O'Brien on why he agreed to go to Vietnam
From the 2017 Vietnam War documentary by Ken Burns
published: 07 Sep 2021
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Tim O'Brien Tells a True War Story
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge
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Need to know the time? Just look at a clock. But if your brain needs to tell the time, it's a whole other different theory. Neuroscientist Dean Buonomano is an expert on brains (obviously) but posits that your brain tells time much more by a domino effect than by any sort of mechanism. He uses an interesting pebble-pond-ripple scenario to walk us through it, saying that "if you throw a pebble into a pond it can create this dynamical pattern. And in a way that pattern tells you how much time has elapsed." Much in the same way, our brain simply looks for patterns. Buonomano...
published: 24 Apr 2012
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Senor - performed by Tim O'Brien at Grey Fox 2013
Tim O'Brien, Jerry Douglas, Bryan Sutton, Casey Driessen, Mike Bub and Noam Pikelny perform on the High Meadow stage at the Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival on Sat., July 20, 2013.
video by Tom Warren
published: 14 Aug 2013
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Tim O'Brien sings "Like I used to do"
Tim O'Brien with Mary Chapin Carpenter "Like I used to do"
published: 21 Mar 2012
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Tim O'Brien - "You Were on My Mind" // The Bluegrass Situation
Watch Tim O'Brien (Hot Rize) walk down a dusty road just outside Telluride, CO for our latest Sitch Session.
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheBGSitch
Discover more:
https://www.facebook.com/TheBluegrassSituation
https://twitter.com/TheBGSituation
https://www.instagram.com/thebluegrasssituation/
http://www.thebluegrasssituation.com/
published: 23 Sep 2014
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Hey Joe - Tim O'Brien
Recorded at Celtic Connections 2009, Glasgow Scotland.
Tim O'Brien - Vocals and Mandolin
Jerry Douglas - Dobro
John Doyle - Acoustic Guitar
Todd Parks - Bass
published: 24 Feb 2009
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What We Still Don't Get About Vietnam | Tim O'Brien | Big Think
What We Still Don't Get About Vietnam
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The rebellious anger of the Vietnam era hasn’t stopped war. In fact, “a slight stink of the hip” now surrounds our cultural memory of the event.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tim O'Brien:
Tim O'Brien is an American novelist. His books include the National Book Award-winning "Going After Cacciato" (1978), as well as his debut novel, "If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home" (1973); his most recent novel, "July, July" (2002); and the Pulitzer Prize finalist "The Things They Carried" (1990), a comb...
published: 24 Apr 2012
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Tim O'Brien band feat. Bryan Sutton - Gentle On My Mind
published: 14 Nov 2011
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Tim O'Brien Band - Walk Beside Me (LIVE on Mountain Stage)
Tim O'Brien Band performs 'Walk Beside Me,' LIVE on Mountain Stage. This performance was recorded in Charleston, WV at the Culture Center Theater.
This special episode of Mountain Stage celebrated Tim O'Brien's 70th birthday and 50th year in the music business with performances by Sarah Jarosz, Karan Casey Trio, Dirk & Amelia Powell, and Tin Men.
See more live Mountain Stage performances at Live Sessions by NPR Music: https://n.pr/3UH2QfO
published: 02 May 2024
-
Dialogue: Author Tim O'Brien
Dialogue host talks with author and Vietnam vet Tim O'Brien about his works and life. O'Brien, who served as an infantryman in the war, won a National Book Award for 'Going After Cacciato,' and was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize for 'The Things They Carried.' Both are set during the Vietnam War.
Franklin and O'Brien talk about the themes of his works, his thoughts on war, and his life as a first-time father.
O'Brien was the keynote speaker at the 2015 Idaho Humanities Council Distinguished Humanities Lecture.
published: 13 Nov 2015
4:19
Tim O'Brien Tells a True War Story
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------...
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Need to know the time? Just look at a clock. But if your brain needs to tell the time, it's a whole other different theory. Neuroscientist Dean Buonomano is an expert on brains (obviously) but posits that your brain tells time much more by a domino effect than by any sort of mechanism. He uses an interesting pebble-pond-ripple scenario to walk us through it, saying that "if you throw a pebble into a pond it can create this dynamical pattern. And in a way that pattern tells you how much time has elapsed." Much in the same way, our brain simply looks for patterns. Buonomano goes into it in more detail than we do here in this paragraph, but the science is largely that simple: our brains tell time by looking for disruptions in the moments of zen.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEAN BUONOMANO
Dean Buonomano was among the first neuroscientists to begin to ask how the human brain encodes time. It’s not an easy concept to grasp, Buonomano says, and for that reason many researchers overlook it. “The first field of modern science was probably geometry, which was formalized by Euclid around 300 B.C.,” says the researcher, “What’s amazing about geometry is that there is absolutely no time involved; it’s the study of things that never change. And there’s a reason why it is one of the first science fields. Science is much easier if you can ignore time.”
Buonomano was in grad school when he became enamored of the question of how we navigate through time. As a graduate student at the University of Texas (UT) Health Science Center at Houston, Buonomano collaborated with Michael Mauk after he heard Mauk’s lecture on his studies of the neural circuits in the cerebellum. Mauk and Buonomano modeled the way the cerebellum’s circuits could respond to stimuli and showed that this type of neuronal network can differentiate between time intervals that differ by just tens of milliseconds. Such networks also have the ability to tune the timing of their responses, the two found. “My collaboration with him was absolutely formative for me,” says Buonomano. “Mauk had this very influential notion that time is encoded in the changing patterns of neuronal activity.”
Today, Buonomano’s laboratory at the University of California, Los Angeles, uses computational modeling, in vitro electrophysiology, and human psychophysics experiments to explore how neurons and the brain as a whole perceive and respond to time. Here, Buonomano describes how he performed his first experiments on his little sister, bathed mice with antidandruff shampoo, and hypothesized that timing is so integral to brain function that all of our brain’s circuits keep tabs on the clock.
In his new book, Your Brain Is a Time Machine, brain researcher and best-selling author Dean Buonomano draws on evolutionary biology, physics, and philosophy to present his influential theory of how we tell, and perceive, time. The human brain, he argues, is a complex system that not only tells time but creates it; it constructs our sense of chronological flow and enables “mental time travel”—simulations of future and past events. These functions are essential not only to our daily lives but to the evolution of the human race: without the ability to anticipate the future, mankind would never have crafted tools or invented agriculture. The brain was designed to navigate our continuously changing world by predicting what will happen and when.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Dean Buonomano: So human beings have been building clocks for millennium and it’s been a long endeavor of our species from sundials to hour glasses to pendulum clocks to quartz watches to car and atomic clocks.
Yet the brain has been telling time since the dawn of animal species, right? So even plants have the ability to tell time in terms of circadian clock.
So one of the mysteries in neuroscience that many people are studying is how the brain tells time. So in order to understand how the brain tells time it’s useful to quickly remember how manmade clocks work. And there’s a vast diversity of manmade clocks from pendulums to quartz watches to atomic clocks. And as diverse as these things are they share a common principle, an almost embarrassingly simple principle, which is just counting the ticks of an oscillator. So with the pendulum you just count the ticks of the pendulum going back and forth. In the quartz watch you’re just counting the mechanica...
For the full transcript, check out https://bigthink.com/videos/dean-buonomano-time-is-a-puzzle-to-scientists-but-your-brain-has-it-all-figured-out
https://wn.com/Tim_O'Brien_Tells_A_True_War_Story
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Need to know the time? Just look at a clock. But if your brain needs to tell the time, it's a whole other different theory. Neuroscientist Dean Buonomano is an expert on brains (obviously) but posits that your brain tells time much more by a domino effect than by any sort of mechanism. He uses an interesting pebble-pond-ripple scenario to walk us through it, saying that "if you throw a pebble into a pond it can create this dynamical pattern. And in a way that pattern tells you how much time has elapsed." Much in the same way, our brain simply looks for patterns. Buonomano goes into it in more detail than we do here in this paragraph, but the science is largely that simple: our brains tell time by looking for disruptions in the moments of zen.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEAN BUONOMANO
Dean Buonomano was among the first neuroscientists to begin to ask how the human brain encodes time. It’s not an easy concept to grasp, Buonomano says, and for that reason many researchers overlook it. “The first field of modern science was probably geometry, which was formalized by Euclid around 300 B.C.,” says the researcher, “What’s amazing about geometry is that there is absolutely no time involved; it’s the study of things that never change. And there’s a reason why it is one of the first science fields. Science is much easier if you can ignore time.”
Buonomano was in grad school when he became enamored of the question of how we navigate through time. As a graduate student at the University of Texas (UT) Health Science Center at Houston, Buonomano collaborated with Michael Mauk after he heard Mauk’s lecture on his studies of the neural circuits in the cerebellum. Mauk and Buonomano modeled the way the cerebellum’s circuits could respond to stimuli and showed that this type of neuronal network can differentiate between time intervals that differ by just tens of milliseconds. Such networks also have the ability to tune the timing of their responses, the two found. “My collaboration with him was absolutely formative for me,” says Buonomano. “Mauk had this very influential notion that time is encoded in the changing patterns of neuronal activity.”
Today, Buonomano’s laboratory at the University of California, Los Angeles, uses computational modeling, in vitro electrophysiology, and human psychophysics experiments to explore how neurons and the brain as a whole perceive and respond to time. Here, Buonomano describes how he performed his first experiments on his little sister, bathed mice with antidandruff shampoo, and hypothesized that timing is so integral to brain function that all of our brain’s circuits keep tabs on the clock.
In his new book, Your Brain Is a Time Machine, brain researcher and best-selling author Dean Buonomano draws on evolutionary biology, physics, and philosophy to present his influential theory of how we tell, and perceive, time. The human brain, he argues, is a complex system that not only tells time but creates it; it constructs our sense of chronological flow and enables “mental time travel”—simulations of future and past events. These functions are essential not only to our daily lives but to the evolution of the human race: without the ability to anticipate the future, mankind would never have crafted tools or invented agriculture. The brain was designed to navigate our continuously changing world by predicting what will happen and when.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Dean Buonomano: So human beings have been building clocks for millennium and it’s been a long endeavor of our species from sundials to hour glasses to pendulum clocks to quartz watches to car and atomic clocks.
Yet the brain has been telling time since the dawn of animal species, right? So even plants have the ability to tell time in terms of circadian clock.
So one of the mysteries in neuroscience that many people are studying is how the brain tells time. So in order to understand how the brain tells time it’s useful to quickly remember how manmade clocks work. And there’s a vast diversity of manmade clocks from pendulums to quartz watches to atomic clocks. And as diverse as these things are they share a common principle, an almost embarrassingly simple principle, which is just counting the ticks of an oscillator. So with the pendulum you just count the ticks of the pendulum going back and forth. In the quartz watch you’re just counting the mechanica...
For the full transcript, check out https://bigthink.com/videos/dean-buonomano-time-is-a-puzzle-to-scientists-but-your-brain-has-it-all-figured-out
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 118587
4:14
Senor - performed by Tim O'Brien at Grey Fox 2013
Tim O'Brien, Jerry Douglas, Bryan Sutton, Casey Driessen, Mike Bub and Noam Pikelny perform on the High Meadow stage at the Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival on Sat.,...
Tim O'Brien, Jerry Douglas, Bryan Sutton, Casey Driessen, Mike Bub and Noam Pikelny perform on the High Meadow stage at the Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival on Sat., July 20, 2013.
video by Tom Warren
https://wn.com/Senor_Performed_By_Tim_O'Brien_At_Grey_Fox_2013
Tim O'Brien, Jerry Douglas, Bryan Sutton, Casey Driessen, Mike Bub and Noam Pikelny perform on the High Meadow stage at the Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival on Sat., July 20, 2013.
video by Tom Warren
- published: 14 Aug 2013
- views: 326305
4:54
Tim O'Brien sings "Like I used to do"
Tim O'Brien with Mary Chapin Carpenter "Like I used to do"
Tim O'Brien with Mary Chapin Carpenter "Like I used to do"
https://wn.com/Tim_O'Brien_Sings_Like_I_Used_To_Do
Tim O'Brien with Mary Chapin Carpenter "Like I used to do"
- published: 21 Mar 2012
- views: 161199
3:03
Tim O'Brien - "You Were on My Mind" // The Bluegrass Situation
Watch Tim O'Brien (Hot Rize) walk down a dusty road just outside Telluride, CO for our latest Sitch Session.
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_ce...
Watch Tim O'Brien (Hot Rize) walk down a dusty road just outside Telluride, CO for our latest Sitch Session.
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheBGSitch
Discover more:
https://www.facebook.com/TheBluegrassSituation
https://twitter.com/TheBGSituation
https://www.instagram.com/thebluegrasssituation/
http://www.thebluegrasssituation.com/
https://wn.com/Tim_O'Brien_You_Were_On_My_Mind_The_Bluegrass_Situation
Watch Tim O'Brien (Hot Rize) walk down a dusty road just outside Telluride, CO for our latest Sitch Session.
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheBGSitch
Discover more:
https://www.facebook.com/TheBluegrassSituation
https://twitter.com/TheBGSituation
https://www.instagram.com/thebluegrasssituation/
http://www.thebluegrasssituation.com/
- published: 23 Sep 2014
- views: 357543
3:45
Hey Joe - Tim O'Brien
Recorded at Celtic Connections 2009, Glasgow Scotland.
Tim O'Brien - Vocals and Mandolin
Jerry Douglas - Dobro
John Doyle - Acoustic Guitar
Todd Parks - B...
Recorded at Celtic Connections 2009, Glasgow Scotland.
Tim O'Brien - Vocals and Mandolin
Jerry Douglas - Dobro
John Doyle - Acoustic Guitar
Todd Parks - Bass
https://wn.com/Hey_Joe_Tim_O'Brien
Recorded at Celtic Connections 2009, Glasgow Scotland.
Tim O'Brien - Vocals and Mandolin
Jerry Douglas - Dobro
John Doyle - Acoustic Guitar
Todd Parks - Bass
- published: 24 Feb 2009
- views: 598388
5:50
What We Still Don't Get About Vietnam | Tim O'Brien | Big Think
What We Still Don't Get About Vietnam
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
-------------...
What We Still Don't Get About Vietnam
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The rebellious anger of the Vietnam era hasn’t stopped war. In fact, “a slight stink of the hip” now surrounds our cultural memory of the event.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tim O'Brien:
Tim O'Brien is an American novelist. His books include the National Book Award-winning "Going After Cacciato" (1978), as well as his debut novel, "If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home" (1973); his most recent novel, "July, July" (2002); and the Pulitzer Prize finalist "The Things They Carried" (1990), a combination novel/short story collection/memoir based on his experiences in the Vietnam War. A special twentieth anniversary edition of "The Things They Carried" was released by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2010.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Are you satisfied or angered byrn the way Vietnam isrnremembered?
Tim O’Brien: Yeah. rnMostly pissed off. I meanrnit comes down on that side. rnThere’s a mythology that a company’s memory of an event, and by rnandrnlarge for my fellow soldiers in Vietnam, the mythologies of betrayal. We were betrayed by ourrngovernment. We were betrayed byrnthe liberal press. It wasn’t ourrndoing, it was their doing.
In the same way that after World War I, the Germansrn werernpreached to by the forces of what became Hitler, you were betrayed at rnthe endrnof World War I and Germany was sold down. rnAnd by at large my buddies feel that way, that we could have won rnthe warrnif more people were killed and more women raped, and more houses burned,rn wernwould have won it. I don’t thinkrnthey’re right, but they feel that way. rnI think you could have paved the country with concrete and put uprn a bigrnfence around it and you’d still have all these people who don’t want yournthere. "You’re Americans, and we’rernVietnamese and this is our country and you may have the concrete and thern bombsrnand the technology, but you’re not going to win us. Yourn may have won a war, in a way."
Well, so there are mythologies of memory. And my dad carried with him out ofrnWorld War II a mythology of America, the Lone Ranger, the doer of good, rnand therncarrier of the democratic flame, and it had an undercurrent of almost a rnsoundtrack of Frank Sinatra...Gene Kelly soundtrack running beneath it rnof buoyancyrnand of virtue. And the soundtrackrnthat ran beneath the movie of Vietnam, you know, and all the people who rnarerngoing to watch this know is not that “I’ll Be Seeing You,” “SentimentalrnJourney” soundtrack. It was arnsoundtrack of The Doors, and The Stones, and it was edgy and critical, rnand muchrnmore ambiguous soundtrack that more or less accurately reflected thernambiguities and the absence of certain moral underpinnings to thatrnenterprise. Those are two prettyrndifferent edifices of this called mythology about a war. rn And mythology is a way of eliminatingrnall that doesn’t fit into it. Yournsort of eliminate that part of it. rnAnd certainly that has happened, certainly for my generation as rnwell asrnmy dad’s.
Question: Has the rebelliousness rnsurrounding the war gainedrnits own kind of allure?
Tim O’Brien: Yeah, I think there’s probably rnsome truth inrnthe notion that there’s an insidious and dangerous side to the mythologyrn thatrnsurrounds Vietnam. It has a slight stink of the "hip" and the "cool" andrn of thern“walking the dangerous line.” And I think there was an exotic feel to rnthe war inrnthis far-off jungle and that was part of the mythology around it. It sort of beckons one anew to thernadventure when we have my exotic experience and dangerous moment that rnmanagesrnto erase the absolute horror of it all... the dead people and the deadrnchildren, and just the horror.
That may be part of what every writer about rnwar has finallyrnhad to come to terms with in one way or another, that pretty great booksrn havernbeen written, including "The Iliad" and "The Odyssey," that haven’t endedrnwars. They haven’t ended the appetiternfor it and it probably won’t. rnThough you always hope.
Read the full transcript at https://bigthink.com/videos/what-we-still-dont-get-about-vietnam/
https://wn.com/What_We_Still_Don't_Get_About_Vietnam_|_Tim_O'Brien_|_Big_Think
What We Still Don't Get About Vietnam
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The rebellious anger of the Vietnam era hasn’t stopped war. In fact, “a slight stink of the hip” now surrounds our cultural memory of the event.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tim O'Brien:
Tim O'Brien is an American novelist. His books include the National Book Award-winning "Going After Cacciato" (1978), as well as his debut novel, "If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home" (1973); his most recent novel, "July, July" (2002); and the Pulitzer Prize finalist "The Things They Carried" (1990), a combination novel/short story collection/memoir based on his experiences in the Vietnam War. A special twentieth anniversary edition of "The Things They Carried" was released by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2010.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Are you satisfied or angered byrn the way Vietnam isrnremembered?
Tim O’Brien: Yeah. rnMostly pissed off. I meanrnit comes down on that side. rnThere’s a mythology that a company’s memory of an event, and by rnandrnlarge for my fellow soldiers in Vietnam, the mythologies of betrayal. We were betrayed by ourrngovernment. We were betrayed byrnthe liberal press. It wasn’t ourrndoing, it was their doing.
In the same way that after World War I, the Germansrn werernpreached to by the forces of what became Hitler, you were betrayed at rnthe endrnof World War I and Germany was sold down. rnAnd by at large my buddies feel that way, that we could have won rnthe warrnif more people were killed and more women raped, and more houses burned,rn wernwould have won it. I don’t thinkrnthey’re right, but they feel that way. rnI think you could have paved the country with concrete and put uprn a bigrnfence around it and you’d still have all these people who don’t want yournthere. "You’re Americans, and we’rernVietnamese and this is our country and you may have the concrete and thern bombsrnand the technology, but you’re not going to win us. Yourn may have won a war, in a way."
Well, so there are mythologies of memory. And my dad carried with him out ofrnWorld War II a mythology of America, the Lone Ranger, the doer of good, rnand therncarrier of the democratic flame, and it had an undercurrent of almost a rnsoundtrack of Frank Sinatra...Gene Kelly soundtrack running beneath it rnof buoyancyrnand of virtue. And the soundtrackrnthat ran beneath the movie of Vietnam, you know, and all the people who rnarerngoing to watch this know is not that “I’ll Be Seeing You,” “SentimentalrnJourney” soundtrack. It was arnsoundtrack of The Doors, and The Stones, and it was edgy and critical, rnand muchrnmore ambiguous soundtrack that more or less accurately reflected thernambiguities and the absence of certain moral underpinnings to thatrnenterprise. Those are two prettyrndifferent edifices of this called mythology about a war. rn And mythology is a way of eliminatingrnall that doesn’t fit into it. Yournsort of eliminate that part of it. rnAnd certainly that has happened, certainly for my generation as rnwell asrnmy dad’s.
Question: Has the rebelliousness rnsurrounding the war gainedrnits own kind of allure?
Tim O’Brien: Yeah, I think there’s probably rnsome truth inrnthe notion that there’s an insidious and dangerous side to the mythologyrn thatrnsurrounds Vietnam. It has a slight stink of the "hip" and the "cool" andrn of thern“walking the dangerous line.” And I think there was an exotic feel to rnthe war inrnthis far-off jungle and that was part of the mythology around it. It sort of beckons one anew to thernadventure when we have my exotic experience and dangerous moment that rnmanagesrnto erase the absolute horror of it all... the dead people and the deadrnchildren, and just the horror.
That may be part of what every writer about rnwar has finallyrnhad to come to terms with in one way or another, that pretty great booksrn havernbeen written, including "The Iliad" and "The Odyssey," that haven’t endedrnwars. They haven’t ended the appetiternfor it and it probably won’t. rnThough you always hope.
Read the full transcript at https://bigthink.com/videos/what-we-still-dont-get-about-vietnam/
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 21169
4:01
Tim O'Brien Band - Walk Beside Me (LIVE on Mountain Stage)
Tim O'Brien Band performs 'Walk Beside Me,' LIVE on Mountain Stage. This performance was recorded in Charleston, WV at the Culture Center Theater.
This special...
Tim O'Brien Band performs 'Walk Beside Me,' LIVE on Mountain Stage. This performance was recorded in Charleston, WV at the Culture Center Theater.
This special episode of Mountain Stage celebrated Tim O'Brien's 70th birthday and 50th year in the music business with performances by Sarah Jarosz, Karan Casey Trio, Dirk & Amelia Powell, and Tin Men.
See more live Mountain Stage performances at Live Sessions by NPR Music: https://n.pr/3UH2QfO
https://wn.com/Tim_O'Brien_Band_Walk_Beside_Me_(Live_On_Mountain_Stage)
Tim O'Brien Band performs 'Walk Beside Me,' LIVE on Mountain Stage. This performance was recorded in Charleston, WV at the Culture Center Theater.
This special episode of Mountain Stage celebrated Tim O'Brien's 70th birthday and 50th year in the music business with performances by Sarah Jarosz, Karan Casey Trio, Dirk & Amelia Powell, and Tin Men.
See more live Mountain Stage performances at Live Sessions by NPR Music: https://n.pr/3UH2QfO
- published: 02 May 2024
- views: 1456
28:51
Dialogue: Author Tim O'Brien
Dialogue host talks with author and Vietnam vet Tim O'Brien about his works and life. O'Brien, who served as an infantryman in the war, won a National Book Awar...
Dialogue host talks with author and Vietnam vet Tim O'Brien about his works and life. O'Brien, who served as an infantryman in the war, won a National Book Award for 'Going After Cacciato,' and was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize for 'The Things They Carried.' Both are set during the Vietnam War.
Franklin and O'Brien talk about the themes of his works, his thoughts on war, and his life as a first-time father.
O'Brien was the keynote speaker at the 2015 Idaho Humanities Council Distinguished Humanities Lecture.
https://wn.com/Dialogue_Author_Tim_O'Brien
Dialogue host talks with author and Vietnam vet Tim O'Brien about his works and life. O'Brien, who served as an infantryman in the war, won a National Book Award for 'Going After Cacciato,' and was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize for 'The Things They Carried.' Both are set during the Vietnam War.
Franklin and O'Brien talk about the themes of his works, his thoughts on war, and his life as a first-time father.
O'Brien was the keynote speaker at the 2015 Idaho Humanities Council Distinguished Humanities Lecture.
- published: 13 Nov 2015
- views: 25509