I've recorded 25 or 30 albums. I know that sometimes when you work with producers who are kinda dictators, it doesn't help you make a better record.
In some of the greatest recordings ever made, the performance is a part of the recording. Dylan's 'Rainy Day Women No. 12 and 35' is all about the esthetic of that performance. You can hear the room.
They're events you remember all your life, like your first real orgasm. And the whole purpose of the absurd, mechanically persistent involvement with recorded music is the pursuit of that priceless moment. So it's not exactly that records might unhin...
A blanket could be used in exciting medical advancements, curing everything from shivers to tonitrophobia.
Clinical, brilliantly medical-minded Adam believes in fate. A fate with Fia.
If someone lives in New York, he's a New Yorker - they are entitled to the best medical system in the world.
Psychiatrists always say, Oh, we're very professional. I use exercise as my medication.
I don't like to take a lot of stuff since I'm really sensitive to medications.
It was my Uncle George who discovered that alcohol was a food well in advance of modern medical thought.
I don't feel one's personal medical condition is everybody's business. It just isn't something you advertise, and it's not open to discussion.
I ask myself: Would I have been any worse off if I had stayed home or lived on a farm instead of shock treatments and medication?
The history of using mice to stand in for humans in medical experiments is replete with failures.
I'm trying to knock the medical profession into accepting its responsibilities, and those responsibilities include assisting their patients with death.
Medical science has proven time and again that when the resources are provided, great progress in the treatment, cure, and prevention of disease can occur.
When I entered medical physics in 1958 there were fewer than 100 in the U.S. and I could see many opportunities to apply my knowledge of nuclear physics.
Was this an old disease, and, if so, which one? If it was new, what did that say about the state of medical knowledge? And in any case, how could physicians make sense of it?
Because of my medical and ideological training, I am accustomed to saying that life is adaptation and symbiosis.
I love the Discovery Channel. I love all sorts of medical shows. I love a show called 'Diagnosis: Unknown.'
There seems little reason to prescribe anti-depressant medication to any but the most severely depressed patients.
As long as they are medicated the right way with the asthma medicine they won't have any problems.
A democratic medical establishment does not alter people's bodies to fit regressive social norms; it advocates for patients by demanding the social body get its act together.