The gentle cold rain in the dark morning reminds me of a poem I love.
Western wind, when wilt thou blow,
The small rain down can rain?
Christ, if my love were in my arms
And I in my bed again!
The gentle cold rain in the dark morning reminds me of a poem I love.
Western wind, when wilt thou blow,
The small rain down can rain?
Christ, if my love were in my arms
And I in my bed again!
Eileen had to work yesterday so instead of having a day off with her, I did tasks all day. I started off with cleaning the kitchen and never got around to doing a blog yesterday. Ran the dishwasher twice, balanced Mom’s checkbook and ours, did Mom’s bills and ours, farmers market, grocery store. Sheesh.
I did manage a couple of hours at the organ console. Recently purchased two volumes of Handel’s organ concertos.
Yesterday as I worked I played Simon Preston’s recordings of them on Spotify and made note of his tempos. The edition I purchased was Herman Keller from 1954. I suspected his suggested tempos were a bit odd and sure enough they were much different from Preston’s.
I seem to be in a bit of a funk this week. Not depressed or melancholy so much as blank and unmotivated. This too shall pass I am sure. In the meantime, I do read quite a bit. Here’s today’s links.
1. Professor of Philip Garber, N.J. Stutterer, Defends Actions – NYTimes.com
A follow up to a previous link. I find this story engaging. It makes me wonder how two people (the professor and student) who seem so connected to their lives ended up on the opposite sides of this controversy. I do ponder how much of it has been manufactured by the reporting.
2. The Bleakness of the Bullied – NYTimes.com
Confessional column by Charles Blow. Still heart rending to me, even if a bit over the top.
3. The 1930s Sure Sound Familiar – NYTimes.com
The 30s don’t seem to sound familiar to people in power in the US right now. Making the same mistakes.
4. Russell Banks Talks About ‘Lost Memory of Skin’ – NYTimes.com
Novel about a group of convicted sexual offenders who are forced to live in a homeless camp. People on the margins always interest me. They seem to have a unique understand of what it means to be alive. I put my name on the wait list for this new book at the library.
5. bootypop.com
New concept for me. One of my ballet instructors began talking about “booty pops” in class. Who knew?
6. New York Times Plans Staff Reductions – NYTimes.com
The terrain of news gathering and reporting continues to shift.
7. Builders of Corn Mazes Hope to Lose Visitors, and One Actually Did – NYTimes.com
Farmers use software to design corn mazes.
Eileen and I attended a performance by Enso String Quartet last night.
They are superb performers. They performed Bartok’s String Quartet No. 2, Op. 12. I have been listening to and studying these quartets for ages. I have a lovely little hardbound copy of them that my brother gave me.
During the second movement, I leaned over and asked Eileen if she recognized the music. She didn’t. I suspected she might because I play the recording occasionally.
I looked up the Haydn quartet they performed as well. I was intrigued by the harmonies in the minuet. If you click on the YouTube, the interesting harmony occurs in between :05 and :06 seconds.
I looked up the score online and this beautiful note is not in the printed score I found. How interesting. I printed off the entire quartet to study (link to PDF of it).
Reading about it online I discovered that it has very irregular phrases. The minuet would be impossible to dance a minuet to. Very cool.
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Local News | Educating Gabriel, 13, an off-the-charts prodigy | Seattle Times Newspaper
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PhotoBlog – Underwater volcanic eruptions cause large green stains on sea’s surface
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Great TED talk. Kudos and thanks to Carrie Hodson for posting it on Facebook. Hazelwood is involved in some interesting projects not least of which is the Paraorchestra (His daughter has Cerebral Palsy and he got interested in the musicality of “disabled” people – more info here: Let’s hear it for the Paraorchestra | Life & Style. If you don’t take the time to watch the TED video, at least watch this very cool trailer of a Hazelwood project.
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One Girl’s Courage – NYTimes.com
Another gritty inspiring story from Kristoff.
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Tehran’s Foes, Unfairly Maligned – NYTimes.com
Insights from former FBI director, Louis J. Freeh.
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Maurice Sendak: ‘I refuse to lie to children’ | Books | The Guardian
Sendak is a cranky old man. Great interview.
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Political Wisdom: GOP Debate Takeaways – Washington Wire – WSJ
A bit belatedly I post this link of reactions to Wednesday’s debate.
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I love this video of images from Mars.
Back at it yesterday, accompanying ballet classes. I was flattered by the teacher, Angie, in front of the her class. She had requested that I do her class yesterday. She wanted to tape her class (something they do to analyze their own technique) and had found my accompaniment before the break helpful to the dancers. She told her class yesterday that she wished I could be their accompanist every class. At this point I (and the other pianist) move back and forth between the three teachers who have class on MWF at 8:30 AM.
I’m not sure what I do that this teacher approves of. I know that I tend to play rhythmically and change the music to fit the movements. I don’t usually use a lot of pedal on the piano (this might make the sound a bit more percussive). And my improvs tend to the simple so that dancers are sure to know where they are in the 8 measure phrases.
Who knows? I do know it’s satisfying to be treated with such respect by people who are good at what they do. I was talking about this with Amanda (one of the other teachers) yesterday in regards to the dance department itself. She asked me how my class with Angie had gone in the morning (I do Pointe class with Amanda on Monday and Wednesday). I told Amanda that I had enjoyed it (I had) and that I enjoyed working with all three teachers. Amanda remarked that they were all a bit crazy and enjoyed working together. I told her that was excellent and unusual in the world of music and colleges.
I guess I’m not sure how unusual it is. I just have seen up close and personal several universities where studios of different music teachers are engaged in mini-wars. And at this point, I feel very isolated from other musicians. I regularly see musicians from Hope and Holland. They tend to keep me at arms length. I think this makes sense because I represent a bit of a threat or an unpredictable and confusing presence as a musician. Whippy skippy.
This brings me to this article in The Anchor, Hope College’s student newspaper.
I think this is an interesting break down. (I also can’t believe that the Anchor doesn’t have an HTML online version online a pdf one. Good grief.) It seems to confirm my own impression that Hope is a typical provincial conservative small liberal arts college.
This is another of the graphic books (it’s not a novel) I checked out the other day. I was disappointed in this one. It’s not really “stories” or “tales.” It’s more like visual essays about the nature of mental health treatment. I put it down after reading about half of it. It has nice pictures, but I didn’t find any true stories in it, just some descriptions interspersed with lots of insider talk.
I have to stop and go to work.
I was reading Andrew Bacevich’s interview in Bill Moyer’s The Conversation Continues yesterday while waiting for my Mom (appointments and shopping).
Here’s a quick bio of Bacevich from wikipedia:
Bacevich graduated from West Point in 1969 and served in the United States Army during the Vietnam War, serving in Vietnam from the summer of 1970 to the summer of 1971. Later he held posts in Germany, including the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, the United States, and the Persian Gulf up to his retirement from the service with the rank of Colonel in the early 1990s. He holds a Ph.D. in American Diplomatic History from Princeton University, and taught at West Point and Johns Hopkins University prior to joining the faculty at Boston University in 1998.
On May 13, 2007, Bacevich’s son, 1LT Andrew J. Bacevich, Jr., was killed in action in Iraq by an improvised explosive device south of Samarra in Salah ad Din Governate. The younger Bacevich, 27, was a First Lieutenant in the U.S. Army, assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 8th U.S. Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division.[link to source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Bacevich]
I found his interview with Moyers focused some of my own questions and posed some I hadn’t thought of. Concerning our current political crisis Moyers quotes Bacevich:
“Here is what I take to be the core of your analysis of our political crisis. You write, ‘The United States has become a de facto one-party state, with the legislative branch permanently controlled by an Incumbents’ Party.’ And you write that every president ‘has exploited his role as commander in chief to expand on the imperial prerogatives of his office.’
“One of the great lies about American politics [Bacevich continues] is that Democrats genuinely buy real diazepam uk subscribe to a set of core convictions that make Democrats different from Republicans. And the same thing, of course applies to the other part. It’s not true.”
After reading the entire interview, I interlibrary loaned Bacevich’s latest book.
I found Among Empires: American Ascendancy and Its Predecessors by Charles S. Maier on the shelf at the library. Maier is an author that Bacevich admires and points out Maier coined the phrases (both to describe the US) “empire of production” and “empire of consumption.” I’m on chapter 3.
These men are thinking clearly and from the context of the military and social history. I find 20th century history confusing and am glad to find some credible sources to help organize my thinking a bit in these areas.
Couldn’t resist picking up a few other books while I was in the library.
I do like graphic novels (memoirs, whatever). Ironically, last night I sat with a a martini and read The Alcoholic by Jonathan Ames and Dean Haspiel. I thought it was pretty good.
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Professor’s Response to a Stutterer – Don’t Speak – NYTimes.com
A person with a stutter who responds resiliently to other people’s stupidity.
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Britain – Aging Big Ben Has Slight Stoop – NYTimes.com
The leaning clock of Britain.
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Chipping Away at Gridlock in the Senate – NYTimes.com
NYT finds a glimmer of hope in recent rule shuffle in Senate. I can only hope they are right.
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This Time, It Really Is Different – NYTimes.com
The Way Forward | NewAmerica.net
Nocera’s column and a link to the source for a way of seeing what is happening in the economy as new and unique.
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Getting Naked in the Massachusetts Senate Race – NYTimes.com
An insightful analysis of the worthiness of two opposing candidates in Massachusetts.
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Wow. Two whole days off in a row (today and yesterday). I think I am beginning to relax a bit this morning. Spent my time reading in Lewis Hyde’s The Gift. I’m just getting to the part where he starts using Walt Whitman in his argument about gift and art.
I guess Hyde himself is a poet. He has promised to use Whitman and Ezra Pound in the second half of his book (which is where I am right now).
I actually love and read both of these poets, so it’s all good for me.
Hyde has some ideas about reason is to life as market is to gift (i.e. a corrupting influence on authentic human activity). He hasn’t entirely convinced me about this. But I am enjoying this book immensely and will spare you, dear reader, my usual quotes.
I continue to study the organ music of Jean Langlais. I am impressed not only by its surface attractiveness but also the deeper craft of his work. When I was school, he was sort of poor man’s Durufle and kind of a bit looked down on. As usual, I wonder why I can’t embrace his work along with the other stuff that I find rewarding. For me the proof is always in the music itself. And I do love returning to music I have owned all my life and finding gems that I previously missed.
Since I have been working Langlais’s setting of the Gregorian Chant, “Homo Quidam,” which is in F# major, I thought it would be fun to look at my new edition of Bach’s Prelude and Fugue in the same key (from WTCI).
Bach just doesn’t disappointment these days. Every note I play seems to be infused with a vigorous beauty and intelligence. This morning I worked on the fugue.
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The Myth of Voter buy generic valium india Fraud – NYTimes.com
I heard a commentator recently say something like it’s not that Obama wants to tax the rich and that the Republicans want to disenfranchise the poor. It’s more like Obama wants to tax the Republicans and the Republicans want to disenfranchise the Democrats. The voter fraud discussion (and also the gerrymandering discussion) remind me of that.
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Is the Tea Party Over? – NYTimes.com
I liked this quote from this article:
“The editor of Texas Monthly, Jake Silverstein, sums up Perry as “a child of the mythology of the frontier,” in which “every man is more or less for himself, a good neighbor is one who needs no help, and efforts by the government to interfere are not to be trusted.”
The description of the “mythology of the frontier” seems to capture the attitude of many angry conservatives.
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Panic of the Plutocrats – NYTimes.com
More of that liberal propaganda I love:
“Wall Street’s Masters of the Universe realize, deep down, how morally indefensible their position is. They’re not John Galt; they’re not even Steve Jobs. They’re people who got rich by peddling complex financial schemes that, far from delivering clear benefits to the American people, helped push us into a crisis whose aftereffects continue to blight the lives of tens of millions of their fellow citizens.”
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Officer Saved at Gunpoint by His Own Wedged Finger – NYTimes.com
This is an amazing story and apparently just par for the course for these brave policemen.
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Christopher Hitchens on Writing, Mortality and Cancer – NYTimes.com
My favorite brilliant conservative’s new collection of essays. Must have it.
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Virtuouso Resources Is Salon for String Players Big and Tiny – NYTimes.com
This music store tries to recreate the old fashioned feeling of a violin shop. I think it sounds charming.
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Determined to actually have a day mostly loafing, I’m only just getting around to today’s post.
After blogging yesterday, I ordered two (free) books from Paperbackswap.com.
The autobiography of William Carlos Williams and a book of his poems. Not sure which book of poems, but since I can’t find a copy of his poems (I’m pretty sure I used to have a copy), I thought I would order one.
Williams was a medical doctor as well as a poet. I am finding Paterson surprisingly engaging for a book length poem. It seems to be a coherent antidote to the vapidity of most stuff in a vernacular that this sixty-year-old recognizes.
“Who restricts knowledge? Some say
it is the decay of the middle class
making an impossible moat between the high
and the low where
the life once flourished .. knowledge
of the avenues of information–
So that we do not know (in time)
where the stasis lodges, the university,
they at least are the non-purveyors
should be devising means
to leap the gap. Inlets? The outward
masks of the special interests
that perpetuate the stasis and make it
profitable.They block the release
that should cleanse and assume
prerogatives as a private recompense.
Others are also at fault because
they do nothing.”from Paterson by William Carlos Williams
Apt quote for an aging part time employee of a college who is on fall break.
I have been listening to Bach’s cantata that utilizes the melody, Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele (Deck thyself, my soul, with gladness – yesterday’s communion hymn and also the melody that Brahms used in the piece I played for the prelude). Here’s a lovely version of the first of it on YouTube.
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Secret U.S. Memo Made Legal Case to Kill a Citizen – NYTimes.com
The Secrets of Government Killing – NYTimes.com
Man o man. The state at its worst.
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5 Reasons The Amazon Kindle Beats The IPad | Fox News
Eileen and I are eyeing this new version of Kindle. It’s not available yet. But it looks interesting.
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The Vietnam War, Still Haunting Obama – NYTimes.com
Remember Marvin Kalb? He’s still around and brilliant as every. He wrote this article.
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Stop the Machine Protest Closes National Air and Space Museum – NYTimes.com
Just in case you missed this.
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Judge Finds Manipulation in Recall Vote in Arizona – NYTimes.com
The people who use dirty tricks continue to outfox democracy.
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Two Festivals for Thinkers Vie for the Minds of Chicago – NYTimes.com
Festivals for thinkers. Wow.
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Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party compared | The panel | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk
Panel of commentators, including one of my favorite liberals, Erik Altermann who also wrote this article:
Think Again: The Era of the ‘One Percent’
William Grieder, another person I admire on the left, had this short little comment:
Why DO They Occupy Wall Street? | The Nation
quote:
“Liberty Park [where the current demonstrations began – SBJ] is now Zuccotti Park, which the real estate developer who bought the land renamed after himself. Doesn’t that pretty much say it? The egotism of capital has obliterated the softer values and virtues of labor and everyone else—anything that got in the way of the engine of modern capitalism. It is not just the millions of innocents who have been trampled by the profit-harvesting machine. The Wall Street guys and their lackey economists even captured the political culture and corrupted its meaning.”
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Got up a bit later than usual for a Sunday morning. Then got pulled in to poetry by William Carlos Williams. It’s getting late so I thought I would put up a quick entry.
I decided I would learn some more of the Langlais organ pieces I already owned.
I turned to his piece in F# major, “Homo Quidam.”
After examining the gregorian chant this piece is based on, I decided there was a misplaced “fine” in Langlais’s score. It makes sense to follow the melody of the chant in determining how to jump around in the piece. Langlais seems to assume that the player understands what a “responsory” is and lays out his music a bit unhelpfully with just a few “signos.”
Still it is a lovely thing.
I did make pizza maragrita on the grill last night. However, I failed to remember that one browns a side and then flips it over. I just laid the dough on the grill and dressed it. So the bottom was black and inedible. Eileen was extremely good-natured about my failed cooking (as she usually is). We scraped the tomatoes, mozzarella and basil off which tasted pretty good. Ah well.
In the afternoon we saw the movie, “The Ides of March.” I think the background of an election doesn’t help this movie even though the story is actually about the struggle between the people who advise candidates. The music was interesting. The story seemed a bit weak to me.
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E-Mail Shows Senior Energy Official Pushed Solyndra Loan – NYTimes.com
Same as it ever was.
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U.S. Envoy, Peter Van Buren, Takes Caustic Pen to Iraq War – NYTimes.com
Liberated, but They Have to Live There – NYTimes.com
On the ground in Iraq with the state department.
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The End of the Future – Peter Thiel – National Review Online
Innovation Starvation | World Policy Institute
The death of ideas from the right and left.
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Breyer and Scalia Testify at Senate Hearing – NYTimes.com
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Confronting the Malefactors by Paul Krugman- NYTimes.com
Krugman continues to make sense to this reader:
When talking heads on, say, CNBC mock the protesters as unserious, remember how many serious people assured us that there was no housing bubble, that Alan Greenspan was an oracle and that budget deficits would send interest rates soaring.
I have been up for an hour thinking about and playing through my new edition of a volume of Bach’s organ music. Specifically two of the manual pieces: Kyrie, Gott Vater in Ewigkeit BWV 672 & Christe, aller Welt Trost BWV 673.
If you are an organist, you need this book. It is one of two new Bach editions that I have purchased recently and have left me excited about the current state of performance scholarship available to students of Bach.
The introductions and critical apparatuses of both provide lots of information including some logical solutions to questions thoughtful performers will ask themselves.
Both represent new waves of scholarship and its application. The organ volume is one of many planned by its publisher (Wayne Leupold). The consulting scholars (Christoph Wolff and Quentin Faulkner) involved are well known to any one who reads in Bach studies.
It’s kind of amazing in this day and age of general lack of education and historical knowledge, that at the same time such examinations of the past represent new light and understanding shed on old topics like which notes did Bach intend and how shall they be played.
The Well Tempered Clavier (as I have mentioned before in this space) represents over 10 years of meticulously picking over previous editions and extant manuscripts.
Then there’s the music in these books.
It could be my own huge ignorance coming to light, but I continue to find new and exciting beauty in Bach. In just the two I was playing through this morning, I discovered how he uses fragments of the melodies to derive beautiful and excellently conceived counterpoint. Yikes! What music!
Yesterday I went to the Music library and checked out a bunch of titles to consider purchasing.
I am reassessing my ideas about Jean Langlais. I have played from his “Vingt-quatre Pieces” (volumes 1 and 2) for many many years. I purchased them before I began my very earliest organ lessons and used them.
I remember having lunch with my teacher, Ray Ferguson, and another organist (both of these men are now dead). At the lunch several things happened. One was that the waitress asked what we all did for a living. Ray and the other guy said organist. Without thinking, I replied that I was a church musician. Sigh. I guess it’s still true.
We were discussing commissioning a living composer for an upcoming national AGO conference. Both men were not interested in Langlais (who was obviously still living at that time). I just kept quiet since I was the least skilled and educated of these three.
But I now look at music a bit differently and think that Langlais wrote much music that I admire. So I’m thinking of purchasing a bit more of his stuff (in order to use up my 2011 organ music fund provided by my church).
Since I’m running on and on here, I will conclude with two lists of titles. One that I looked at and decided not to purchase, a second that I looked at and decided to purchase.
No:
1. Two meditations for organ by Samuel Adler
2. Toccata, recitation and postlude by Samuel Adler
3. Two Pastels by Anthony Donato
4. from looking at his work in Wayne Leupold’s First Organ Book, Dennis Janzer didn’t interest me as a composer
Maybe:
1. Trois Implorations by Jean Langlais
2. Fête by Jean Langlais
3. Neuf Pièces pour Grand Orgue
4. Six preludes for organ by Ernest Bloch
5. Two pieces for organ (Fugue and choral) by Arthur Honegger
6. from looking at work in Wayne Leupold’s First Organ Book, I am interested in the organ works of Robin Dinda, George Lachenauer, Janet Correll, Austin C. Lovelace, and John G. Barr
If you have an opinion, let me know or leave me a comment.
Spent the early hours with Beethoven sonata 27 this morning.
I am evolving a much more careful practice approach to reading music. Under tempo, of course, with an emphasis on careful correct notes and rhythm. But also stopping and doing hands separately to allow accuracy.
So my reading didn’t sound much like the final piece (especially as played by the excellent Wilhelm Kempff in this video), but satisfying to me nonetheless.
I had another full day yesterday. I ended it by finally returning to doing some cooking. I made potato leek soup, ridiculously easy cheese bread, and apple crisp. Served an improvised pear-walnut-blue cheese-balsamic vinegar salad.
I was exhausted by the time we sat down to eat. But I miss cooking.
Thinking of making pizza margarita this evening instead of ordering in. Eileen hinted that it would be good to have pizzas from the grill. Maybe I’ll do that. Or maybe I’ll just order pizza.
I am feeling pretty deflated this morning.
Part of this is that I was anticipating not having to play a ballet class this morning. But the fall break doesn’t begin until 5 PM. I do like doing this, I just miss having unstructured time off.
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Czech Republic – Woodrow Wilson Is Honored With a Statue, Again – NYTimes.com
Did you know that Czechoslovakia put up a statue in honor of Wilson in 1928 and that Hitler tore it down later? I didn’t.
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A Changed Russia Arches an Eyebrow at Putin’s Staged Antics – NYTimes.com
This article interested me because of the opening description of a staged incident of Putin discovering artifacts underwater, then the wonderful dance of repudiation from the Russian PR guy. Fun stuff.
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Lancet Report Cites Rate of Late-in-Life Surgery – NYTimes.com
Doctors gotta doctor. They can cut for what they understand whether you’re dying or not.
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Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworth, Civil Rights Leader, Dies at 89 – NYTimes.com
Yeah, yeah, I know, Steve Jobs died. But this guy is much more interesting to me.
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Crisis Pregnancy Centers and Propaganda – NYTimes.com
I see these pregnancy centers a lot in Western Michigan. Despite the times, I still believe strongly in a woman’s right to control her own body, not the states (i.e. I’m pro-death as I like to say….. you know. pro-abortion.
Is anyone really pro-abortion?)
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I had a very busy day yesterday even though I had no ballet classes or other appointments.
I wrapped and sent off 4 packages in the mail: 2 to England, 1 to California and 1 return package of Eileen shoes to godknowswhere. After practicing organ for a couple hours, I came home and madly cleaned house.
Last night a kitchen design person met with Eileen and me for a preliminary discussion of kitchen renovation. This will be phase 2 of fixing up the house a bit.
I’ve also received some of my birthday gift in the mail.
This is an amazing edition of a book of music I have literally been playing and thinking about since I was an early teen. It took over ten years to prepare and apparently represents a pretty exhaustive look at previous editions, all extant manuscripts, not to mention a fascinating table of tempos in editions and performances. I’m pretty much in love with this particular book and am going over it very carefully.
I have been following Bocolm’s work for a while. Broke down and bought his complete rags. The music is technically demanding but lots of fun so far.
I have been in love with Takemitsu’s music for quite a while as well, but have never learned any of his piano music. I haven’t looked at these yet, but am anticipating checking them out soon.
I also decided on Tuesday to play Brahms and Vaughan Williams for prelude and postlude Sunday.
Brahms wrote some lovely chorale preludes one of which is based on Schmucke dich.
This is not the edition I am using.
Vaughan Williams has written a nice postlude type piece on Hyfrydol, our closing hymn.
These will make nice organ music for Sunday.
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A Bonnie Glass Of Highlands Gin – NYTimes.com
This gin looks good to me.
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Pear Salad and Crostini, From Early-Autumn’s Bounty – City Kitchen – NYTimes.com
Also went to farmers market yesterday and bought pears, nectarines, apples and basil. Tis the season.
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Britain Plans to Tighten Anti-Squatter Laws – NYTimes.com
Apparently in the UK people not only move into empty buildings but also steal buildings from rightful owners by occupying them. Wow.
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Dalai Lama’s Visa Request Is Denied by South Africa – NYTimes.com
This is disgraceful but not surprising. China pressure on South Africa leadership.
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Keep Works in the Public Domain Public – NYTimes.com
An unusual argument from a usual suspect in the film industry.
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russpoldrack.org: NYT Letter to the Editor: The uncut version
I recently flippantly linked a NYT article about loving one’s phone. This is a coherent blow by blow taking apart of the notion.
Here’s another:
Blog Archive » the New York Times blows it big time on brain imaging
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BBC News – Folk musician Bert Jansch dies aged 67
I have been a fan of this man for many many years. Sorry to see him go.
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We’re Sorry You Ever Came To Our Store & Wasted Our Precious Time – The Consumerist
Arrogant business people.
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Reading in Baruda-Skoda’s Interpreting Bach at the Keyboard this morning, I ran across this quote from Quantz in a footnote:
“Dance music in the French Style, e.g. sarabandes, must be ‘layed seriously, with a heavy yet short and sharp bow-stroke, more detached than slurred. That which is delicate and singing is rarely found in it. Dotted notes are played heavily, but the notes following them briefly and sharply. Fast pieces must be executed in a gay, hopping, and springing manner with a very short bow stoke, always marked with an interior stress. In this fashion the dancers are continually inspired and encouraged to leap, and at the same time what they wish to represent is made comprehensible and tangible to the spectators; for dancing without music is like food in a painting.”
Interesting analogy since food in a painting while not real can still be very beautiful and interesting.
Eavesdropping on reaction to last week’s dance recital from dance teachers and students at Hope College was very surprising to me. They were critical of the failure of the dance company to completely adapt to the small stage at Knickerbocker where they performed. Also they felt like their dance was a bit on the “classical” side when they were expecting more Jazz and Modern style.
For my part, I felt like the performance outweighed these criticisms. Mostly because I was so impressed with the way the choreography fit with the music in detailed and beautiful ways.
But I did wonder about making a dance for a recording. They used recordings of Miles Davis & Steve Reich I recognized and other recordings I did not recognize. The origin of the Davis recordings obviously have a debt to spontaneity and improv. But this aspect of the music is gone when it becomes a fixed recording. Even without actual improvisation, all live music has an element that is impossible to be captured in a recording.
The conductor/performer Sergiu Celibidache, whom my friend Mihai mentioned to me recently, was also sensitive to this distinction which is lost on so many listeners (and probably performers) these days.
“Celibidache’s approach to music-making is often described in terms of what he did not do instead of what he did. For example, much has been made of Celibidache’s “refusal” to make recordings even though almost all of his concert activity actually was recorded with many released posthumously by major labels such as EMI and Deutsche Grammophon with consent of his family.[2] Nevertheless, Celibidache did pay little attention to making these recordings, which he viewed merely as by-products of his orchestral concerts.
Celibidache’s focus was instead on creating, during each concert, the optimal conditions for what he called a “transcendent experience”. Aspects of Zen Buddhism, such as ichi-go ichi-e, were strongly influential on him. He believed that musical experiences were extremely unlikely to ensue when listening to recorded music, so he eschewed them. As a result, some of his concerts did provide audiences with exceptional and sometimes life-altering experiences, including, for example, a 1984 concert in Carnegie Hall by the Orchestra of the Curtis Institute that New York Times critic John Rockwell touted as the best of his twenty-five years of concert-going. [3]”
from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergiu_Celibidache
It seems to me that dance choreographed to live music is a different animal from dance choreographed to recordings. I fully understand the efficacy of using recordings these days, but I do wonder about what is lost.
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Using the Web Wisely in a Health Crisis – NYTimes.com
The usual wisdom from my heroine, Jane Brody.
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Offbeat Corporate Giving – A Park Inspired by Planters Peanuts – NYTimes.com
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Tuning Out the Noise (1 Letter) – NYTimes.com
This letter writer is an orchestral musician. I found his comments from this point of view very interesting.
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Testing Scotland’s tuition fees – Telegraph
Scots Rejected University Tuition Increase, but Not for Other Britons – NYTimes.com
So Scotland is attempting to charge the rest of the United Kingdom tuition while allowing Scots to attend for free. My daughter paid exorbitant fees to attend university in the UK while her British friends paid little or nothing. This has changed. Now they charge a bit more for the Brits. It will be interesting to see if Scotland gets away this.
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Scientists Report Ozone Hole Over the Arctic – NYTimes.com
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Justice Stevens Memoir, ‘Five Justices [sic],’ Recounts Court Years – Sidebar – NYTimes.com
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Trail of 100 Giants Fall in Sequoia National Forest – NYTimes.com
They don’t know why two great trees are down.
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The Cronyism Behind a Pipeline for Crude – NYTimes.com
Same as it ever was.
” …[I]nstead of listening to bright people like Mr. Hansen who know what they’re talking about, our government’s staffers are blowing kisses at lobbyists. That’s exactly why cronyism is such a problem. The people writing these e-mails don’t have expertise — they have connections. If this is happening in the State Department, why should we not assume it’s also going on in the Treasury Department’s dealings with the big banks, and just about everywhere else in government?”
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It’s a chilly dark fall morning in western Michigan. Instead of trying to relax this morning with some reading, I’m blogging first. This has something to do with my own fatigue.
I’m still pretty tired this morning. And a bit depressed as well. I think this is a combination of sheer physical exhaustion from my ongoing schedule, the end of the Sarah’s visit from England and the fallout from Sunday’s intense musical performances.
But upward and onward.
I have a ballet class this morning, will be taxiing my Mom to a shrink appointment, and cajoling her to have lunch with me. Somewhere in there I have to do my silly little church work which now includes updating my Music Ministry Facebook page with links to upcoming readings as well as choose a prelude and postlude for Sunday.
So even though I’m tired and melancholy, life is still good.
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Wow. Lots of different covers for this novel. I’m about half way through it. Last night I was reading it while Eileen was watching a PBS video of him singing and talking. Good old PBS won’t allow the entire video embedded. Here’s a portion of it.
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I’m a fan of Lawrence Lessig. He has a new book out and was interviewed this morning on the radio. Here’s a link to an excerpt: To Rescue Politics, Adopt Small-Donor Reforms: Lawrence Lessig – Businessweek
I don’t think it’s a secret that our government has been captured by the people with the most money (that would be corporations not unions, ahem). At any rate Lessig seems to be making a case for giving the government back to the people by changing the financing of elections. I’m for it.
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I’m embarrassed to admit that for some reason I thought William Kennedy was dead. I read his Albany series. I’m glad to hear that I seemed to have missed some subsequent novels. Chango’s Beas and Two-Tone Shoes is his latest. Here’s a link to a review: William Kennedy Goes to Cuba and Back – NYTimes.com
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Frank Zappa, his groupies and me | Music | The Guardian
New book from Zappa’s secretary.
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Sergiu Celibidache – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I have coffee at the student union between classes sometimes. Mihai Craioveanu, the violin professor at Hope (and also a member of my church) sometimes chats me up. Last week he mentioned this man as an interesting person in music history. A conductor that insisted on many rehearsals and few recordings. Celibidache began his career as a jazz pianist and ballet class accompanist. Mihai thought I might be interested. I was.
This week I asked him to spell the man’s name again so I could effectively google him.
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Home Page for the National Music Museum
Yesterday Mihai mentioned this museum in South Dakota as well. Extensive collection of early instruments. Mihai told me it was underwritten by someone who made their money in computers. Very cool.
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Yesterday I bogged down in some grammar essays about active and passive voice.
Lingua Franca – The Chronicle of Higher Education
Language Log » The passive in English
I find that when people speak in the passive it sometimes indicates weirdness. Hard to generalize about this weirdness, but usually there’s some anger and denial in there somewhere. At least that’s what I have been told (passive voice).
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Compassion Fatigue – NYTimes.com
Though interesting I find this article skims the surface a bit. I am not convinced by the implication that public insensitivity is related to the emotional fatigue of helping professions. What about mob mentality (which seems to function when people applaud horrific things happening to other people)?
Not to mention that over and over I often hear less thoughtful commentators jumping quickly to the conclusion that people they disagree with are irresponsible, lazy (don’t those people on demonstrating on Wall Street have jobs?), and deserve their problems.
For my part I think we need to combine responsibility with generosity for the best public approach.
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With More Doctorates in Health Care, a Fight Over a Title – NYTimes.com
“But many physicians are suspicious and say that once tens of thousands of nurses have doctorates, they will invariably seek more prescribing authority and more money. Otherwise, they ask, what is the point?”
God forbid it should be learning and improvement…. what a sorry state we are in when everything is reduced to power and money…
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Unsurprisingly, yesterday took quite a bit out of me.
I think I was a bit giddy at church with the prospect of performing some fine music well. It was fun. It all went pretty well. There was lots of crowd noise during the prelude. But I ignored it and tried to just enter in to the spirit of the music.
I also am taking note that I actually receive many compliments each Sunday morning both before and after church. Before church a woman I did not recognize told me how much she appreciated the music at Grace. After church, compliments abounded on the Mendelssohn and Bach pieces we did.
I find both the noise and the compliments enervating. In order for me to play well I have to enter into a vulnerable place where I am most myself. I think that noise and distraction are ultimately part of public music performance.
Thomas Merton taught me that distraction itself is part of contemplative prayer. If that is so (and I think it is), then distraction is also part of public music performance.
So the noise was not particularly challenging to deal with.
Compliments are always challenging to receive. If they are not offered one wonders how well one has been received. When they are offered, it’s important to receive them graciously in the spirit they are offered.
I do find it disheartening when I come up for breath that listeners (or more properly non-listeners) sometimes treat the music so cavalierly. But this is something I have mail order valium experienced more and more in Holland Michigan. It is probably largely of my own making by seeking a venue where people don’t really listen much or appreciate the kind of music I make. On the one hand, it’s not what many people recognize as good music in their daily lives. On the other hand, I have several fellow musicians who hold back both their comments and their approval which makes me suspect they are critical of my work.
It reminds me of the organ students at U of M. Apparently I was known as the organist who played in a converted gymnasium during my stint as music director for St. Timothy’s Trenton (which was indeed a terrible electric organ in a converted gymnasium).
This is probably just the reflections of a tired mind.
Yesterday was also the annual outdoor Blessing of the Animals. This means that I have to transport my electric piano and outdoor amplification equipment for this short service. I have been thinking about Bach’s Art of Fugue and his Chorale Partitas.
I performed the entire set of one of these for a Bachelor’s graduation recital (Sei Gregusset). And have since learned most of the the others. Yesterday I chose to play several movements from his “Ach, was soll ich Sunder machen” Partita. It made sense. All of the movements I played outdoors were for manual only. I played them on the two electric piano stops. I thought they sounded pretty cool.
Another good poem from William Matthews on the Writers Alamanac
A Night at the Opera
by William Matthews
“The tenor’s too fat,” the beautiful young
woman complains, “and the soprano
dowdy and old.” But what if Otello’s
not black, if Rigoletto’s hump lists,
if airy Gilda and her entourage
of flesh outweigh the cello section?In fairy tales, the prince has a good heart,
and so as an outward and visible
sign of an inward, invisible grace,
his face is not creased, nor are his limbs gnarled.
Our tenor holds in his liver-spotted
hands the soprano’s broad, burgeoning face.Their combined age is ninety-seven; there’s
spittle in both pinches of her mouth;
a vein in his temple twitches like a worm.
Their faces are a foot apart. His eyes
widen with fear as he climbs to the high
B-flat he’ll have to hit and hold for fivedire seconds. And then they’ll stay in their stalled
hug for as long as we applaud. Franco
Corelli once bit Birgit Nilsson’s ear
in just such a command embrace because
he felt she’d upstaged him. Their costumes weigh
fifteen pounds apiece; they’re poached in sweatand smell like fermenting pigs; their voices rise
and twine not from beauty, nor from the lack
of it, but from the hope for accuracy
of passion, both. They have to hit the note
and the emotion, both, with the one poor
arrow of the voice. Beauty’s for amateurs.
I’m up early and hoping my daughter made it safely back to England. Distracting myself studying Bach’s Art of Fugue. What a magnificent work! I think I agree with Jordi Saval:
” the Musical Offering and The Art of Fugue
‘overcome the most rigorous challenges, whilst never sacrificing the expressive quality and musical eloquence which, even in his most elaborate and complex passages, provide the unbroken thread of Bach’s musical discourse.” quoted in Uri Golumb’s online pdf article “Johann Sebatian Bach’s The Art of Fugue“
Playing through the fugues on the keyboard, I discover over and over moments of rare beauty in the midst of the complex counterpoint.
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Samir Khan, Killed by Drone, Spun Out of the American Middle Class – NYTimes.com
American citizen accused, tried and executed on the spot. The movie, “The End of Violence,” has long been a reality.
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Central Falls, R.I., Library Fights to Stay Open – NYTimes.com
Inspiring story of locals keeping a library open. Here’s the link to the actual library: Adams Memorial Library
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The Nuremberg Scripts – NYTimes.com
Idealism is missing in action in America. This article reminds me of a time when it was not:
” ‘[O]ur system is not lynch law. We will dispense punishment as the evidence demands.’ Led by the Americans, the Allies were insistent that the Nazi defendants be treated fairly; Burson’s pride in that ethos shines through on every page. This postwar idealism was one of the Greatest Generation’s finest qualities. Today’s cynical, divided country sorely misses it.”
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You Love Your iPhone. Literally. – NYTimes.com
Love is different from addiction.
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So Eileen and I took Sarah to the train stations this morning so she could take her train to Chicago where she will take a flight to London.
I hope she enjoyed her visit as much as I did! She let me scan in a couple of her drawings from her recent New York visit:
Sarah was especially interested in the fact that she and Elizabeth both made pictures of the same model at Dr. Sketchy’s.
Here are Elizabeth’s.
I love the fact that both of my daughters keep doing art.
My niece, Emily, took this pic of me and my Honey Crisp dessert at Cranes on Thursday.
Today is much chillier in Western Michigan. Down to the forties.
On the Media had two very fascinating segments on their show this week.
Playing games to solve actual scientific problems. Very cool.
Click the pic to go the actual foldit website.
Game designer, Jane McGonigal, designed a game to help her deal with a brain injury. The result is a whole use of gaming to achieve crucial health goals.
Again click on the pic to go to the actual Superbetter website.
Finally, my copy of Ligeti’s Hungarian Rock came in the mail yesterday.
Motivation to get my harpsichord up and running.
Or maybe I’ll learn it on the organ:
Either way, I think it’s a pretty cool piece and look forward to both learning to play it and understand it.
Thursdays are shaping up as a weekly pleasure for me that usually includes meeting with my boss (a pleasure), rehearsing with piano trio (another pleasure) and teaching my piano student (also a pleasure). Not the same as a day off but definitely a good day.
Yesterday I had an excellent Thursday. I met with my boss and piano trio (no piano lesson). My daughter, Sarah, is currently visiting from England. My nephew, Ben, and niece, Emily, and her husband, Jeremy came over from the eastern side of the state to see Sarah.
It was great being with these wonderful people all at once. They had some time to visit with each other. Then in the evening we all met Eileent for a wonderful meal at Citi Vu Bistro which is situated on the top of a little hotel in Holland.
While we were drinking and eating the weather changed dramatically. A huge blue storm cloud moved over us from the inland toward Lake Michigan. It was quite dramatic. It moved quickly. Then it left millions of droplets on the windows facing the reemerging sun.
This was incredible. Then a rainbow appeared in the west as well.
We managed to get tickets for everyone to go see a performance the River North Dance Chicago.
They were incredible.
What a day!
Today the River North Dance Company gave a master class to all ballet classes so I didn’t have to work! Yay!
Life is good!
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I found some amazing pics at this link.
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Just Look at What You Did! – NYTimes.com
Another small story of hope and love in the face of incredible obstacles (in Kenya).
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The Not-So-Green Mountains – NYTimes.com
Wind power versus retaining forests.
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This Sunday we are performing two very moving pieces by Mendelssohn.
These players do a nice job of the movement from the Mendelssohn piano trio we are planning for the prelude, Sunday.
For the offertory we are singing an English simplified version of “Verlei uns Frieden” which seems to be a posthumous publication of Mendelssohn’s.
Interestingly, the entire score and orchestra parts are available online. When deciding how to perform this piece with only violin, cello and piano Sunday, I emailed off the online parts to my instrumentalists.
Unfortunately, the score begins with a lovely cello duet. This duet persists throughout. The original violin part is very minimal. So I took a bit of time yesterday and transcribed the first cello part for the violin. I am hoping that a cello/violin duet with suffice in this context.
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Reverie and Invocation by William Carlos Williams
Yesterday’s poem of the day from “The Writer’s Almanac.” Several nice lines in it:
Now we grow old and grey
and all we knew is forgotten
there comes alive in
the ash of today, memory! a god
who revives us!…
Come back and give us
those days when passion drove us
to break every rule.
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This War Can Still Be Won – NYTimes.com
A glimmer of hope in from a knowledgeable American voice on the ground in Afghanistan.
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I have one of these little spots on my eye. My daughter, Sarah, was kind enough to teach me the name of them:
It’s a symptom of all kinds of fun things. Great.
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Students’ Knowledge of Civil Rights History Has Deteriorated, Study Finds – NYTimes.com
My experience of young adults is that very few of them know much history at all.
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Having finished reading Fire on the Mountain by Anita Desai, I poked around on the web to see if I could find a review or analysis of this book. Everything I read seemed not to talk about the stuff that is most interesting to me in this book.
SPOILER ALERT
So. The bare bones of the plot are that Nanda Kaul is living out her old age in the her mountain home of Carignano in Kausali. Situated on a ridge, this home looks out on the Himalayas to the north and the plains to the south.
She shuns human contact and even dreads the postman’s visit or the telephone’s ring. Her great-granddaughter Raka (the name apparently means “moon”) is sent to live with her. Raka likewise shuns human contact but in a different way. She is a wild solitary child who loves to explore and watch. Nanda Kaul and Raka live uneasily with each other. Nanda Kaul begins to recognize herself in the young Raka, but neither can quite bring themselves to accept the other. On her part, Nanda Kaul gradually courts Raka with stories about her past including wonderful stories of her life with her dead husband. Rake is silently impatient and bored with these overtures and continues to sneak away and explore the village and forest.
In the third section Nanda Kaul’s grotesque life-long friend Ila Das comes to visit for tea despite Nanda Kaul’s reluctance. For me, Ila Das is the fascinating crux of this story. Her voice is shrill and unpleasant.
“It was this cackle, this scream of hers…. that held all the assorted pieces of her life together like a string or chain. It was the motif of her life, unmistakably. Such a voice no human being ought to have had: it was anti-social to possess, to emit such sounds as poor Ila Das made by way of communication.”
Even Ila Das’s walk like her entire life is a series of uncertain and ugly lurches and starts. As we learn her story from her awkward conversation with Nanda Kaul, Ila Das has had a life of tragedy. She has been a victim of circumstances all her life.
Indeed when she arrives at Coragno, she is being followed and tormented by a gang of boys. Sometimes the local monkeys do the same to her.
The reader eavesdrops on the uncomfortable conversation at tea. It becomes apparent that Ila Das, though reduced to poverty having lost her job as a teacher, is at this point in her life a social worker of a sort eking out a very small salary visiting people in her village. She urges them to vaccinate their children and discourages them from marrying their daughters at age 12 or younger in order to procure property and wealth.
Her description of her activities at this time of her life is in contrast with her obviously repellent personality and mannerisms.
Nanda Kaul inwardly considers inviting Ila Das to live with her because she is struggling so. But predictably she does not.
Ila Das leaves Nanda and Raka for the long walk back to her village. She dawdles too long in markets where she cannot afford to even purchase foods to prepare for her evening meal. One shop keeper feels especially sorry for her. The reader enters his mind and we see him listening to the cursing of the father of one of the families that Ila Das has badgered about marrying off one of their very young daughters.
As she arrives late to her village, this particular father attacks her, rapes her and kills her.
Nanda Kaul receives a phone call from the police who have found her name and phone number on a piece of paper in Ila Das’s bag. They ask her to come identify the body.
At this point Nanda Kaul thinks in shock that what she is hearing on the phone in her hand is a lie. In fact her own life is a lie. We learn that all the wonderful stories she has been courting Raka with are lies. Like Ila Das, Nanda Kaul has had a tragic life married to a man who does not love her. While she is trying to accept this terrible turn of events, Raka quietly comes in and informs her she has set fire to the forest.
The books ends with this disturbing scene.
I love the complexity of the story. The characters are developed to such an extent that they are compelling believable even as we are repelled by their personalities.
All are victims caught in a web. Raka is still weak from typhoid. Raka’s mother, Nanda’s granddaughter, is described early on as “helpless jelly, put away out of sight” by the mistreatment of her husband. Raka’s descent into mad violence seems inevitable as does the cruel death of Ila Das and the lies and bitter loneliness of Nanda Kaul.
The book is clearly and beautifully written. And there are many secondary details I have not touch on that complete the story such as the presence of a factory, the Pasteur institute, where rabies vaccinations are made and distributed and raids of the gangs of monkeys that torment the villagers.
One reviewer I read said it is a perfect example of “showing not telling.”
I love it when a book leaves me with a riddle that is such a believable echo of real life.
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Small Fixes – The Simplest Health Solutions? It’s Complicated – NYTimes.com
Bar soap, pill boxes, lists and weight loss. Simple solutions that are not always in fashion at present.
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In Thailand, an Innovative Fight Against Cervical Cancer – NYTimes.com
Inspiring story of another simple solution….. vinegar turns pre-cancerous spots white so they can be removed. Cheap and effective where pap smears are not feasible.
I especially like the story of Dr. Kobchitt Limpaphayon of the Thailand royal family.
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Medvedev Fires Russian Finance Minister for Insubordination – NYTimes.com
Stuff is happening in Russia.
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In Britain, a Coalition Government, Increasingly, of the Unwilling – NYTimes.com
Fall is the time the UK parties meet and greet and speechify each other. It seems that politicians are the same the world over.
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‘Diversity Bake Sale’ at Berkeley Is Priced by Race and Sex – NYTimes.com
Though I don’t agree with the Republicans who devised a bitter satire of a bake sale, their opponents seems humorless and needlessly serious. Whippy skippy.
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Engineers to Rappel Monument – NYTimes.com
Climbing on Washington’s monument to examine it for cracks. Very cool.
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The Wall Street Protest – NYTimes.com
This is a letter that contests NYT reporting on this ongoing stuff.
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My daughter, Sarah, returned from New York with a bunch of pastels (?) that my other daughter, Elizabeth, had set aside for Eileen and me.
I got up and scanned several. But my new stupid printer made them all one huge tiff file that I can’t seem to easily edit down into separate pictures (besides the one above) even though it asked for a new file name after each scan. I now have five or six huge files of the same size of all the scans and am unable to access them separately. Technology. Sigh.
Anyway, I love the work of both daughters and wanted to share. Now I’m out of time for scanning. I’ll try to put a few more up in the future.
I had a weird series of emails from the good people at Grand Haven High School. I have been helping out with their pit orchestras for their musicals ever since Greg Maynard came there to be the band director.
Last year Greg hinted that he was being pushed out politically and that it might be his last musical.
Sure enough that turns out to be the case.
This summer the choir director contracted me to play for the auditions for the musical this fall. Re-reading her emails I see that she was “hoping” to work with me in the fall.
Unfortunately, every year, Greg would email me far in advance with dates and remuneration information. This year I received no emails from him.
At the same time I noticed that I never really had a full vacation to recuperate this summer. I entered into the fall schedule realizing that I couldn’t really add another commitment even if I wanted to. If Greg emailed me at any time, I was prepared to not take on the work this year.
The new director contacted me this week. The performance is in six weeks and apparently they have already begun rehearsing. She and the choir director were both surprised that I wasn’t committed to helping them this year in Greg’s absence.
I find this oddly naive. Greg was really the reason I kept doing this even though it strained my energies and time commitment (the school is a half hour drive away). The remuneration was just barely worth the work. Without Greg, I don’t think it would be worth it. Part of my satisfaction was working with this fine musician and inspiring teacher.
For the other teachers to be complicit or abetting in his removal is very distasteful to me.
I tried to tactfully explain why I did not consider myself already hired for this gig this year. The choir director finally gave up attempting to change my mind and seems to blame Greg for not making it clearer to them that they needed to contract with me (Can’t help but wonder about the other adult professionals that Greg would hire to supplement the weaknesses of the current crop of student musicians. Maybe they will just be available at the last minute?).
It was no fun trying to keep myself extricated from such a messy and apparently unethical situation and at the same time write reasonable and calm emails. Sheesh.
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Haven’t read this yet. But also haven’t entirely forgiven Obama for ditching Wright.
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Saudi Monarch Grants Women Right to Vote – NYTimes.com
What next? The right to drive? Will wonders ever cease?
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Mexican Teachers Push Back Against Gangs’ Extortion Attempt – NYTimes.com
Extortion apparently is rampant in Mexico. I am horrified by this report. It makes me grateful to live in a society with more constraints on criminal behavior.
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For Russia’s Liberals, Putin Announcement Stokes Woes – NYTimes.com
Cynical stuff in Russia. Putin stays on. Sooprise, sooprise. Ron Susskind writes in his book The Way of the World how Bush refused to suspect Putin of lying and would not allow his people to use bugs that were already in place to monitor him. Good grief. Putin is obviously a person determined to hold onto power.
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Church Rebuilds After 2008 Election Night Arson – NYTimes.com
This is a hopeful little story about one triumph over hate and racism. I especially found it moving to read about many other religious organizations chipping in with time and money to rebuild.
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Companies Get Gay-Rights Heat Over Christian Donations – NYTimes.com
Freedom of purchase versus your purchase is your vote.
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An Indefensible Punishment – NYTimes.com
Until we abolish capital punishment, I will always see us as unable to restrain this barbaric aspect of our country.
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Why the Antichrist Matters in Politics – NYTimes.com
A little history and analysis on this idea.
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