jupe and his dang blood pressure plus a cool piano book and a good recording

 

doctor

I called my doctor’s office yesterday and made an appointment. In the meantime, my doctor phoned in a new blood pressure med for me to add to my daily drug dose. The med is Norvasc. I misheard the person on the phone who told me this and thought he said Norco.

I looked at Norco online and was a bit disturbed. It had liver warnings and I could not drink while taking it. It seemed to be partially a very strong narcotic (an opiod). As I was recalling the doctor’s office to ask about this, Eileen googled it as well and got very upset.

Oops. Norvasc is a different story, so we all calmed down a bit.

Since I have an HMO insurance plan I will need a physician referral. I have already alerted my doctor to this. I also emailed my boss, Rev Jen, to ask if she knows of a good fit for me. it can’t hurt to show up to my doctor’s appointment with ideas. If push comes to shove, I would opt for an out of network shrink if he/she was a good fit and I could afford it.

My first BP reading this morning was a bit higher than it has  been the last few days (149/99). But then I did the five minute wait thing where I sit quietly for the time and retook it. It plummeted. 135/101. That’s a little better. Still obviously something is going on with me and I want to come at from all angles.

My nephew, Ben, brought a copy of Re-Introduction Etudes by Chilly Gonzales to show to Leigh on Thursday evening. Leigh is a piano teacher and he thought she might be interested in it. And it is a beautifully designed book. Book design is something that interests Ben.

I snooped and looked at it very thoroughly. It is a mixed bag. Gonzales seems to have many complaints about classical music. He writes “Some composers feel a need to over-write their pieces, introducing far too much material for the ear to grasp. This is my main problem with classical music.”

But on the other hand, he comes at his etudes which are designed to introduce basic concepts like Bass, Melody, Intervals, Arpeggios as well as “Blue Notes” and other popular music ideas. There is lots of prose and it’s all  in three languages (English, French, German).

I was impressed enough by the book and its approach that I want to get a copy to my grandson, Nicholas at some point.

I have been listening to this recording on Spotify. I like hearing instruments play fugues. I can hear the lines better. Some of the movements in this recording are on organ and on harpsichord. Nice variety.

Somalia Raid Aided by U.S. Kills Fighters From Shabab – The New York Times

What can I say? Americans at war everywhere.

George Martin, Redefining Producer Who Guided the Beatles, Dies at 90 – The New York Times

I have admired this man’s work for years. And he did it all with a four track recording machine! Amazing!

 

 

jupe looks at his depression

 

My brother, Mark, who is familiar with clinical depression, told me yesterday that I am exhibiting symptoms of depression. My rising blood pressure (which is down another coupe notches but still high this morning, 144/99),  lack of perspective at my work, anxiety, weeping, all, Mark sees as possible evidence of depression. Eileen agreed with him. So. I will ask my doctor to refer me to a psychiatrist when I see her.

I have always thought that I haven’t quite entered into actual depression. I remember that people with clinical depression have low motivation and often are debilitated to the point they cannot get out of bed.

That has never happened to me. Plus I know that I am basically not unhappy with my life.

On the other hand, a quick google reveals that much of the stuff I am dealing with is associated with depression including hypertension (high blood pressure).

Things like

early morning rising (ahem)

feelings of worthlessness (a lifelong struggle that I combat almost daily)

difficulty making decisions (I can make them but it takes a toll)

mood swings

feelings of anxiety and fatigue

self medication with alcohol

emotional eating

There’s probably other stuff but it’s enough for me that two of the people I love deeply, Mark and Eileen, both think I should pursue this.

I wonder about starting therapy at the age of 64.

I love to talk so talk therapy is not something I dread particularly. I also have a tendency to over confide which might or might not come in to play if I reach therapy.

I was thinking last night that the complex thing that is a personality is difficult to unravel with any clarity.

I have difficulty imagining where I would begin with a shrink. Plus I would want someone a bit literate and, of course, intelligent.

I have ceased to write the “bad paul simon songs” I wrote in my youth.

I have wondered if the real purpose of these songs was for me to work out my personality problems. I know they have always felt therapeutic.

And it’s hard to admit, but I am having difficulty getting off the ground with active composition.

When I think about this, I immediately think of my daily stress and the pressures I find myself under.

So I guess I’m going to follow up on my hypertension and possible depression with medical professionals.

I wonder what that will be like.

We had to turn back just as we began our trip over here to Mark’s yesterday. I had forgotten my organ shoes. I hesitated before turning around. But I knew I wouldn’t do very well if I couldn’t rehearse Sunday’s postlude for two entire days. I enjoy practicing. I enjoy putting myself through the paces of learning new music that is challenging and attractive to me. Sunday’s postlude fits this description. And my rehearsing this week seems to be paying off as the difficult little fugue by Gerald Near I want to perform falls into place.

As I was leaving the little church that allows me to practice on their terrible Allen organ, one of the ministers asked me what I thought of their new organ. I had to tell him I wasn’t in love with it, that I preferred pipe organs. But I quickly added how grateful I was to be able to practice on it.

Depression and High Blood Pressure

One of the sites I looked at this morning.

Signs of Clinical Depression: Symptoms to Watch For

another

more BP (yawn), growing old, and diamond hard love

 

Doing my blog first this morning, before Greek. Blood pressure is a bit down again this morning but still high enough that barring a dramatic drop I will probably contact my doctor next week.

I learned something about myself yesterday. After my higher BP read mentioned in yesterday’s blog, I was concerned.  However, I quit taking my BP telling myself I didn’t want to know. Eileen went grocery shopping (!) and I went to church to practice. I found it difficult to concentrate since I was worrying about my BP. It seemed hot in the church. Was I exhibiting symptoms of some sort connected to my high BP? Was my worrying actually making my BP worse?

hot.

Finally I checked the thermostat at the church and it was 75. That’s hot, right? I asked myself. I came home and immediately took my BP. It was down, but I had learned that I increased my anxiety by NOT checking it if I was wondering about it. Sheesh.

So I desperately need some time off, eh? I’m hoping three days away will at least help me regain a bit of perspective.  The choir seemed a bit more restrained last night than last Sunday. I was probably imagining it, but I felt the choir was a bit kinder to me.

After rehearsal, we dropped Mom’s headboard to her bed off at Mark Edgington’s for him to spot weld. It’s more like her sideboard than headboard.

For the Best – The New Yorker

This is a story by Ann Beatie in the current New Yorker mag. I am attempting to sequester myself a bit on Wednesday afternoons to allow myself some down time on a hard day. Yesterday, I read my new New Yorker and got sucked into this story.

I think it’s a story about aging. At least I found that it was for me. I only gradually realized that the main character, Gerald, Is 80 years old by my guess. At one point his ex-wife who he has not seen for  years,  startlingly mentions she was seventy years old. Earlier we learn that she is nine or ten years younger than him.

As I realized that Gerald was that age, many quaint things about him come into focus, like not being on Facebooger, kissing a young woman’s hand in greeting, and generally exhibit quaint and old fashion manners and lack of vulgarity.

The story ends nicely with him seeing himself in the elevator mirror and think to himself: “It was as he thought: he had grown old.”

Roddy Doyle reads Maeve Brennan – The New Yorker

Then there’s this artful short story, “Christmas Eve,” by Maeve Brennan. I think this story is about the gift of love between undemonstrative people.

The Love A Life Can Show Below Poem by Emily Dickinson 

This is the poem for today on Writers Almanac. the above link has the poem if you want to read it. I’m not too impressed with the way Garrison Keillor reads this poem, but I do think it is a beautiful poem. Emily Dickinson’s best poems are hard and shining like diamonds. This is, for me, a deep and beautiful song about the “love a life can show.”

I especially like the closing lines:

‘Tis this—invites—appalls—endows—
Flits—glimmer—proves—dissolves—
Returns—suggests—convicts—enchants—
Then—flings in Paradise—

There was a typo on the Writer’s Almanac online for today. I went on their Facebooger page and informed them.

Elections Podcast: The Biggest Primary Polling Upset Ever | FiveThirtyEight

This is interesting. It’s mostly about the polls getting Michigan wrong. However, despite the moderator’s enthusiasm, Nate Silver ultimately observes that it’s not THAT big a deal.

small-choirs.org.uk

And for all you people out there looking for music, here’s a link where I think there might be free music. Haven’t waded in yet since I’m trying not to think about church all the time.

 

nothing much

 

My blood pressure continues to fall although it’s not quite acceptable yet. When I first took it this morning it was 149/114. Just now it was  160/117. Yikes. This disproves Eileen’s theory that since my blood pressure tends to go down after I clean the kitchen, I need to keep doing that daily to help it. If these readings persist I will have to contact my doctor. Damn.

The weather has been lovely here in Holland, Michigan. The piles of snow are receding making small streams of water running to the drains. Eileen and I went to Mom’s yesterday, but we didn’t walk. We drove so that Eileen could disassemble Mom’s bed. The back of the bed has come loose and needs to be spot welded. Rhonda’s husband, Mark, has a welder and likes to do this sort of thing. He has agreed to do Mom’s bed.

We drove home and then walked to the church. It was a lovely day.

I am surprised Sanders won the Michigan Democratic primary yesterday but not surprised that Trump won the Republican one. It’s hard not to think that the hate engendered by hate radio and the far right is coming home to roost in the persons of the extreme candidates in the Republican party. It’s almost like there has been a systematic dumbing down of the popular of the USA so that ludicrous non-reasoning undisguised bigotry works better than content in luring people out to vote.

Here in Ottawa county  Trump didn’t win. Instead Cruz did, who in my opinion is as crazy as Trump. Kasich beat Trump as well here. Of course there were many more Republicans voting than Democrats. There are 194,707 registered voters in this county. 83,379 voted yesterday. Republicans 60,043, Democrats 22,327. You get the picture.

For some reason in addition to my usual practicing I have been working on some Jazz tunes. I have been learning Affirmation by Jose Felciano.

I have been listening to this version. Here’s one by the composer himself.

Okay, Windows wants to update in a big way so I need to stop.

no pics today, but some stories

 

Blood pressure still high this morning but beginning to drop. That’s good. I hope I can modify my behavior enough to help stave off high blood pressure for a few years.

In the meantime, I seem to be assailed by scenes of life.

A man with one eye, the other covered by a jaunty eye patch, talks intensely to a woman who is facing surgery. He listens intently to her, attempts to ameliorate her anxiety with his own expansive responses, gesturing. He anticipates her reactions to her surgery. It seems to be based upon his own surgery in which he lost his eye. He doesn’t specifically say that. But it does seem that way. And so the woman’s impending surgery is to the man as much about the his experience as her own future.

I listened to a New Yorker Fiction Podcast of Joyce Carol Oates reading Eudora Welty’s short story, “Where is the Voice Coming From?” Welty wrote this story within twenty four hours of Medgar Evers murder.

It’s an amazing story written in the clear prose of Welty. As is sometimes the case when I listen to these podcasts, I find myself distinguishing between the writer of the story and the reader. Oates has never been someone who interested me as an author. When she said that Flannery O’Connor never wrote in the first person, I thought she was wrong.

I checked it out and it seems she was right. O’Connor’s vivid stories spring to life in my brain containing such unique and bizarre characters that I remembered them as though they had been written in the first person.

Another thing Oates said that inspired me to ponder was that no one in 1963 was reading The New Yorker magazine if they were racists in the south. I thought that was weird. Welty herself was born and died in Mississippi. Flannery O’Connor was born and died in Georgia. Surely they had white racists friends who read the New Yorker occasionally.

The Princeton prof Oates seemed to be falling into the weird stereotype that all bigots were/are southerners and that northerners are more sophisticated and bigotry free.

I’m probably reading into her comments, but it got me thinking about my own early life in the south. As an adult, I realize that I was raised on the white side of town in Greeneville, Tennessee. It took me a while to understand that many of the gentle good people I knew at that time were, in fact, most probably convinced of the supremacy of white people, i.e. racists.

I only remember a few times noticing black people in Greeneville. One time is not so much a memory as an apocryphal family story that when I saw my first black person, I remarked that he was a “chocolate person.” All very cute. Although my memory of this story does not include how the person being talked about by the little white boy reacted.

Another memory (scene) was watching Ralph Waddell, father of my childhood friend, Reggie Waddell, at a Harlem Globetrotter’s game in Greeneville. My Dad had told friends that he knew one of the players on this team, had gone to school with him, I believe. Ralph, a stalwart church leader in Dad’s church, walked over during half-time and stood near where the player Dad had identified was practicing lay ups.

I remember Ralph as natty in the southern way. Bowtie, pressed wool plaid pants, standing with his hands in his pockets near the basketball player. How did he look to the player? It must have been disconcerting to have this white man (whom I now remember had puffy almost childlike cheeks and horn rim glasses) standing there before asking him if he knew Paul Jenkins. I remember the player admitting that he did know Dad in a very few words. This seemed to satisfy Ralph. He, Reggie and I returned to our seats for the game.

Ralph was good man. He might never have read The New Yorker. However, my beloved 2nd Grade Teacher, magically named Mrs. Disney (like the TV show!) may have. I like to think that she did. I think of her as sensitive and intelligent. I seem to remember her as a classic aging southern beauty with age spots showing on an exposed throat.

I’m pretty sure Mrs. Disney was complicit in the racism of the south at the time, the Jim Crow, and other terrible things.

Welty wrote her story the day after Medgar Evans was shot in June 1963. She mentions the Kennedys in it. JFK was to be shot a few months after Evans murder and the publishing of Welty’s thinly disguised fiction.

Shed no tears for Antonin Scalia: Let us not praise the man who gave us Citizens United and Bush v Gore – Salon.com

I think I’m becoming addicted to the FAIR podcast, Counterspin. I was listening to an old one this morning while cleaning the kitchen. They interviewed the author of this article as a corrective on the dominant media take on Scalia. Worth reading and thinking about.

Violence in Blue | Patrick Ball | Granta Magazine

I have this bookmarked to read. I have found some top notch writing in Granta Magazine and even subscribed to it for a while. Patrick Ball, the author of this article and a statistician, is doing work about gathering information about police violence world wide.

Tensions Simmer as a Small Town Seeks Answers in a Boy’s Killing – The New York Times

Another long read and example of good journalism from the NYT. The story is a fascinating one and is ongoing. The “simmering tensions” in the headline are definitely racial.

Italian Cuisine Worth Going to Prison For – The New York Times

The oddity of a gourmet restaurant in a prison and ran by prisoners.

When the Tide of Islamophobia Reached My Hometown Mosque – The New York Times

A chilling on the ground look at hate in the USA from one of the hated.

Waiter, Where’s Our (Political) Spinach? – The New York Times

We say we want good election reportingr, however we tend to read more about the horse race.

jupe remains stressed

I am still stressed and burned out this morning. At least according to my several high blood pressure readings this morning. Nice. Then I discovered I neglected to take my meds yesterday. Not sure how related that is to my high readings, but it does show I was stressed enough yesterday to forget to take my daily meds.

Church was a bit out of control yesterday.

I had choir members unhappy. In the pregame rehearsal, they were unhappy with my rehearsal techniques, two of them visibly annoyed when I didn’t do what they wanted me to do fast enough, another picked up on the fact that I was doing something and waited until I was done to tell me what I should do next. Good grief. And there was the soprano who was weeping throughout the rehearsal (not one of the ones yelling at me).

I managed to at least act like I was the person in the room in a good mood despite all the weird behavior.

When we finally got downstairs to start the service, the crowd noise was louder than usual. There were two visiting children sitting in the back row shouting at themselves and other people. We start services in Lent with a Taize chant. Jen has put a note in the bulletin to the effect that we want to begin with a contemplative moment.  I have asked the choir to “oo” the chant through twice before singing it softly to help this.

oooooooo

Yesterday in the pandemonium preceding this moment, my boss looked at me as I was approaching the piano eyeing the screaming kids. She quietly said to me, “Good luck!”

The only thing I could think to do was what I did the previous week, begin improvising very softly with a sort of minimalist pattern of high notes kind of like very quiet bells. I couldn’t really hear what I was doing. I added a bit of a chord with the left hand. Gradually the crowd noise began to grow  less.

I cued the choir to “oo” and we were off. It was an artful moment in the face of the usual American lack of politeness and awareness.  I did notice that the children in the back row had begun to whisper loudly instead of shouting. I thought that was a bit of a successful thing.

My head was spinning after church. I played a difficult setting by Francis Jackson as the postlude and did it pretty well if under the ideal tempo. Of course, the crowd noise made me glad that at least this week I had schedule a postlude that wasn’t soft.

We drove over to say hi to my Mom and then came home. I suggested to Eileen we go to the Sushi place for lunch. We can’t keep doing this. It costs too much. It’s not an expensive place to eat. Yesterday’s meal was around $50 with no booze.

I decided to go practice organ before I lost all of my ebbing energy. I carefully rehearsed the postludes for the next two Sundays (a charming fugue by Gerald Near and the first movement of the Art of Fugue by Bach).

Came home and listened to this lovely video.

Esperanza Spalding is the real deal. I put this up on Facebooger. Martini time came an hour earlier last night.

terminology

 

I have spent the last few mornings thinking about terminology in relation to the accents of Greek. It leaves my head spinning, frankly, but I think I’m beginning to get a handle on the precise naming of exactly where and which accents fall on the various transformations words go through in Greek to indicate their function.

I’ll try to keep this brief and clear (sparing you dear reader). Suffice it to say that the position’s names exist in both Latin and Greek.

The last syllable of a word is the “ultimate” syllable in Latin and the “oxytone” in Greek. The next to the last syllable of a word is the “penultimate” in Latin and the “paroxytone” in Greek. Three syllables from the end is the “antepenultimate” in Latin and the “proparoxytone” in Greek.

I figured this all out when the writers of my text dropped the term “paroxytone” into a sentence perplexing this reader.

Similarly when reading about “enclictics” (don’t ask), the writers of the text used the abbreviations “q.v.” and “e.g.” back to back in a sentence.

I could figure out what “q.v.” probably meant by context but realized I didn’t know exactly what these abbreviations meant.

A quick google revealed the answers.

q.v

e.g.

 

i.e.

Thinking about it, I knew that I distinguished “i.e.” and “e.g.” without thinking much about it. I used the mnemonic “in other words” to help me remember what “i.e.” means and then just remembered “e.g.” meant for example. I’m sure I read what they meant exactly but did not retain that. “Q.v.” was a new one for me, but I did guess the meaning correctly from context.

Are you asleep yet, dear reader?

In Xi Jinping’s Tears, a Message for China’s People – The New York Times

As the Facebooger meme says, 1984 by Orwell was not meant to be a handbook. Cult of personality, indeed!

India Denies Visa Request From Religious Freedom Monitoring Group – The New York Times

By denying the visa, India draws attention to their shortcomings in this area. A bit like Mitt Romney inadvertently aiding the haters of you know who by self righteously condemning him. On the other hand, not even I could resist sharing the photoshop pic below on Facebooger, despite drawing attention to him who shall not be named.

jupe lazes about

 

I’m using my new computer this morning to write this.

Hopefully, I will be able to make it do what I want it to. After the restart and updates yesterday, the touch pad was allowing me to right click which is an improvement. I like the size and weight of my Thinkpad X1 Carbon. I also like the speakers sound.

I usually try to remember what I would put up with the old transistor radios I used to listen to. Compared with that, most laptops are a bit better and this one is.

My blood pressure has been slowing dropping back into a range acceptable to me. This morning’s reading was 127/96. The lowest it’s been in a week or so. Fascinating, eh?

I’m hoping I can get a bit of balance back soon. My planned trip out of town will probably help.

elephant

Eileen and I voiced one more note yesterday on the old Zuckerman harpsichord.

quilling.done

We are now up to 8 notes. I didn’t feel like doing much of anything yesterday much less the exacting act of adjust a jack and a quill. It took us about 45 minutes.

I miss playing Francois Couperin’s music, so I have been playing it on the piano. It’s not quite the same. For some reason, I’m a bit of purist about this music. It’s weird. I was thinking yesterday that I have a taste for the French Baroque primarily because of my late teacher, Ray Ferguson.

He loved it. He taught it to me. Now I love it, too.

While learning more about my new computer I discovered that it has the feature of being able to back light the keyboard. I like this quite a bit.

A Comedy Team in Mexico Takes the Law Into Its Own Hands – The New York Times

Great story in yesterday’s paper. Humor combined with activism.

How to Remove the Mildew Smell from Books: 15 Steps

I was reading a poetry book I bought recently and realized that I always notice it smells mildewy. I should be able to fix that, eh?

‘The Sense That Everybody Thought They Had WMDs Is a Total Fantasy’ — FAIR

I like FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting).

 

 

 

new computer! jupe runs away next week with wife

 

So I began this morning blogging from my new Thinkpad which arrived at church yesterday. So far I like it quite a bit. I’m still learning it, of course. It has one of those track pointing devices.

I managed to get it to work last night, but this morning I can’t even get the touch pad to right click. So, my learning curve is such that I switched to the old computer for blogging, while the new one updated itself.

I forgot about Windows 8 (which is what this machine came with). I will have to relearn/readapt it. But I am grateful to have this new machine bought for me by the church (and I get to keep it!).

My friend Dave Barber emailed me a video by Wintergartan a few days ago. I just got around to checking it out this morning. I loved it and immediately subscribed to the group’s YouTube channel. This video of his amazing Marble Machine is wonderful. I put it up on Vicebook this morning.

So Eileen and I are planning some time away next week.

My cri de coeur yesterday elicited sympathetic responses from loved ones (thanks and love to brother Mark and daughter Elizabeth!). Time to get away to attempt to gain some perspective.

Donald Trump Favorable Rating – Polls – HuffPost Pollster

Donald Trump Is Really Unpopular With General Election Voters | FiveThirtyEight

These are the links Mark put in his comment yesterday. I only hope that they reflect some sort of reality that the majority of US citizens are repulsed by Trump.

Donald Trump and Reconstruction-Era Politics – The New York Times

Speaking of perspective (and also history), Brent Staples refreshes our collective memory.

Egypt’s Parliament Expels Lawmaker Who Dined With Israel’s Ambassador – The New York Times

The photograph accompanying this article is arresting (so to speak).

A Fiery Debate on the K.K.K. in 2016. Who Figured? – The New York Times

I didn’t think they allowed actual content on TV these days. Kudos to Van Jones for being coherent and sane.

Garlic Roasted Broccoli (I Could Eat This Everyday) | Paleo Grubs

Simple, good. I should try this soon.

despite the stupid shit, the music keeps me going

 

Yesterday, I had a meltdown privately before choir rehearsal. The sheer banality of my day, the pressure, the stress, all blinded and constricted me.

It’s not that necessary to rehearse it all here. But stupid shit is getting me down and putting me off balance.

Although outside of the house I try to keep quiet, I am losing perspective about stupid shit.

Stupid shit like the new sound system at church actually hums and fills the quiet of the choir area with a sound just a bit louder than our wheezy old pipe organ blower which I can clearly hear in every service. I sometimes close the swell box just to lessen the noise from the old organ. Now, I will also have a little humming sound unless the case that will be coming soon will dampen it.

Stupid shit like the fact that people at church are worried about the color (THE COLOR) of the new pipe organ and have asked the builder to darken the beautiful wood of his
lovely instrument.

Stupid shit like the fact that I spent an hour in a staff meeting listening to tech people explain Windows Outlook and how wonderful it is despite the fact that my boss and I
privatedly later confided to each other that we have both have decided to
limit our use of it to church shit. All this of course, so that our small little staff can have
emails with a cute churchy domain name. Stupid shit like the tech guy telling us he would take all the contacts of our present email and email them our new email address. This was the point at which I raised my hand and asked him not to do that for me. I guess jupe is not quite the team player, eh?

So I found myself in a nonsensical argument with the love of my life, beautiful Eileen, with jupe spluttering and spouting nonsense as I am wont to do.

As I realized what was happening, I was overcome by a sense of quiet despair and sadness. I quieted down. We went to the Sushi restaurant for for a quiet supper. Choir rehearsal was the usual little bit of hell with people acting out. It’s my job.

On the other hand in between the banality, I rehearsed organ and piano. Excellent music by Francis Jackson and The Art of Fugue by Bach. The music keeps me going.

From the Aeneid Book VI – The New Yorker

My six issue discount subscription with the New Yorker is now over. I put the magazine on trial in my mind. Could I find anything redeeming or interesting in each issue besides the cartoons. This poem was a redeeming aspect of the last issue. I guess I’ll keep the subscription. I hope it’s not too expensive.

My deceased Father’s birthday is next Wednesday. This poem is about Aeneas’s father. The last lines of this translation of an excerpt I found haunting.

… And as he [Aeneas’s father] spoke he wept.
Three times he [Aeneas] tried to reach arms round that neck.
Three times the form, reached for in vain, escaped.
Like a breeze between his hands, a dream on wings.

FiveThirtyEight Explains Super Tuesday – On The Media

Okay. This is a podcast that On the Media excerpted recently that was done just prior to Tuesday’s primaries. In it, one of the staff talks about the fact that a large percentage of the American people (60 or so per cent) disapprove of Trump and that does not get reported much. I couldn’t find anything online to back this up. It would be a bit of comfort if it were true.

Episode 19: Father Pfleger, Larry David, and the History of Autism – The New Yorker

Speaking of the New Yorker and podcasts, I listened to the beginning of this one this morning. Father Pfleger is a startling story about someone doing good on the streets of Chicago and finding a way to daily suspect realistic cynicism.

america goes insane

 

Super Tuesday Results 2016 – The New York Times

Trump’s victories yesterday are note surprise. But they are disturbing. I think that America has lost its bearing when so many people can vote for a personality so devoid of content and direction.

In ‘Half Earth,’ E.O. Wilson Calls for a Grand Retreat – The New York Times

A hero of mine.

jupe the retro hippie likes the art of fugue

 

After the concert the other night, Eileen and I ran into a couple of people from Our Lady of the Lake where I used to be music director. It was nice to see them. They are our age or a bit younger. The husband told me I was looking like a “retro hippie.” Then he said something like he meant a “hippie.”

I am definitely primitive (hippie?) in the way I see music. I need a visceral reaction these days, a feeling in my gut, to convince myself that something is music I want to hear. I do like all kinds of music. But like food, I prefer a balanced diet of well prepared and executed genres.

Recently, an organist from Grand Rapids mentioned on Vicebook that he had a parishioner request the Art of Fugue. He was, of course, bragging a bit. This reminded me how much I love this work. During my stressful marathon last week, I rehearsed Countrapunctus IX from it.

I will always hear it the way the Swingle Singers do it. I have been playing it much slower and going for accuracy, especially the duration of pitches. This is a bit tricky in such a thick texture.

Before my ballet audition on Sunday I was playing through it. Tim, the principal ballet master from the Connecticut based Nutmeg Ballet Conservatory, came over to the piano before beginning the class.

Tim Melady from Nutmeg ballet conservatory

He saw my copy of “The Art of Fugue” sitting on the piano. He tapped it and said that he liked my playing of it. I told him I was still learning it.

When we parted later that day, after he had paid me, he said, “Good luck with The Art of Fugue.”

Funny how a little encouragement goes a long way these days for me.

I was touched that he remembered I was working on it and maybe even understood how rewarding it was for me to have first hand contact with this masterpiece.

Yesterday, when I went to practice organ, I meant to take my cheapo version of The Art of Fugue with me. It was transcribed from the original multiple staves to to two staves by Czerny in the 19th Century. The Dover edition is inexpensive. Fancier editions of this kind of thing (especially for piano) can be quite expensive. The nicer edition would have much less editorial additions. I use the Czerny at the piano and ignore his editing (dynamics, articulation and such).

Anyway I forgot to take it with me. So I went and thumbed through my organ music and found three versions of Contapunctus I. Right now, I am in love with the simple basic theme that runs through so many of these pieces.

I rehearsed Walcha’s version for organ (which for some reason I have a photocopy of) and decided to perform it soon at church.

This morning besides working on 9 I also worked on 1 and 2 from this work. I also contacted the guy on Vicebook in hopes he would tell me what version he was working from and if he recommends one.

I feel like a bit of an outsider (hippie) when talking to people in the rarefied world of academic music and the organ world. I know there are people in these fields that I have a lot in common with. However (besides my friend Rhonda) there are few around the Holland area who seem to see me with credibility. It’s hard to tell how much is the effect of being an intimidating old hippie musician and how much these people see me at all.

Nevertheless, I like the way I connect to the music in my life. It’s like that food analogy. Many musicians feel that the way they see their little slice of music is the only legitimate (existing?) way to connect to music. When I meet these people I am interiorly relieved that I don’t have to see music that way. That my retro hippie way fits me like a glove. I do love Art of Fugue.

I know I promised to talk about the rest of the concert I went to the other night, but I’m suspecting most of my readers are not that interested in more of that. I know Rhonda was interested, but she was at the concert and doesn’t need my blather about it.

made it

 

I made it to Monday. Over the course of three auditions the last three days, I worked with three people I had never seen before the audition, two men and one woman. They all three ended up being very complimentary to me in ways that seemed authentic. I think that I have come to doubt the authenticity of the compliments of the people in local dance department. They are very complimentary to my face, but I have had to draw their attention to the monetary worth of my work which seems slightly contradictory to all the love and roses they lavish on me otherwise.

But these three outside people who live in the rigorous world of professional ballet seem to appreciate the subtleties of what I do when I improvise in this kind of situation. The fun part of this work is when dancers begin to dance like they are listening to the music. When this happens then I can make up music that reflects their response. This kind of ensemble is very exciting. It happened a few times in the last three days.

Some of the fun is that both teachers and students are more likely to have my own eclectic musical tastes than other college trained musicians. So it’s a more level aesthetic playing field in which to improvise.

I especially enjoyed working with the improvisation teacher the past two Fridays (who teaches at at Hope and with whom I have never worked before these series of Hope auditions). Through prompts of emotion and other descriptions often pried from the students themselves, this teacher attempts to fire the imagination of the dancers. The restrictions of the 4 and 8 bar measure phrasing goes out the window when playing piano for these exercises. I am able to speak a musical language closer to my own heart. Lots of fun.

In addition to the three auditions, I met with my flute player again. In our meeting, I seem to have convinced her to skip playing with the choir and play her premier piece, “I’m just a wayfaring stranger,” for service as well as helping with the sequence hymn. I saw her yesterday and she seemed more happy in her greeting to me than I remember her every being.

Then there was church.

This was our first Sunday with our new sound system. The people who installed it came to church to help adjust it in a real live situation. I was surprised that there were so many glitches (feed back, static) since this system was expensive and the people installing it were touted as very good at what they do.

One of the upsides is that they moved an ugly metal cabinet that had been taking up space in the choir area. We had more room yesterday and that was nice.

The removal of this monstrosity was part of the reason I pushed myself on Saturday to clean the organ and choir area.

The music went well. The gathering chant worked better. The psalm went well. These weekly Anglican chant psalms have worked their way into my preparation time. The organ has to be solid to lead them and of course they are different every week.

The anthem was a setting of Aus Tiefer by Distler and was lovely.

I played the Distler organ piece I have been working on and nailed it. Unfortunately due to Distler’s registration requirements (what sets of pipes play what notes) there was no way I could register it loudly. So of course very few people heard it. But what the heck. Toujours gai, Archy, toujours gai. There’s a dance in the old dame yet!

Dan Savage Lovecast Episode 487

I have had Dan Savage’s Lovecast on my podcast subscription for a while. I admire this man. He is a voice of sanity in an insane world. This morning I listened to the beginning of this episode and it is excellent.

He makes a very good point about Clinton and Sanders. He supports them both. Many of Savage’s listeners hate Clinton because she was against same sex marriage. Savage makes the salient point that it’s bad politics to try to convince someone to change their mind and when they do, tell them: Fuck you! You didn’t always think this way!

Ah, yes.

Amid Iraqi Chaos, Moktada al-Sadr, an Old Provocateur, Returns – The New York Times

Pragmatic Rouhani hails poll wins, ally salutes will of people

Interesting times in Iran. This explains why hardliners there recently put more money on Rushdie’s head, I guess.

 

a restaurant and a concert

 

After an exhausting day for both of us, Eileen and I met our friends, Rhonda and Mark, at a new restaurant last night, Mizo Sushi.

This seems to be a prevalent name for a restaurant on Google. I can’t quickly tell if it’s a franchise, but I can tell you the food was spectacular. I had something that looked like this:

Eileen doesn’t like Sushi, but she found something to order that was also excellent. All of our meals were.

Then we walked to the concert. The musicians were the Bang on a Can All Stars.

This was the first piece. Here’s a better recording:

The concert was amazing. There was a carefully worked out evolving emotional scheme between the pieces that seemed lost on people who were leaving during the concert.

Sunray is about waking up next to a cleaners (named Sunray) and having coffee and listening to the sounds and looking at the sun. It is dedicated to the father of the composer (David Lang). I think it captures this interior/exterior moment very well. Eileen like this one a lot.

Then came this piece by Julia Wolfe.

She says she was influenced by John Lennon’s “Tomorrow never knows.” She explores the dimensions of the act of believing. The people in the video are the people we heard play last night.

This is the song she had in mind. I remember it now that I hear it.

I think I’m going to stop here. I have to get going and gear up for the home stretch of my marathon few days: church this morning and one last audition this afternoon.

Maybe I’ll continue looking for videos of the music we heard last night. It really was fantastic.

 

 

weeping dreams, new flute player and blood pressure

 

Eileen has already left for her day long Weaving workshop she and a friend are attending in Grand Rapids.

In my dreams last nights, there was weeping. First, I wept when someone gave me an original manuscript of Mozart. For some reason it was very emotional for me in the dream.

In a later dream I was talking to a precocious little girl.

She and her mother and father were in a room with me. She was telling them that she was “new” meaning young I gathered in the dream. I told her that she was “new” and I was “old.” She began weeping presumably out of pity for me. For my part, I wanted to explain to her that this was how life worked and that it was wonderful.

I guess she was the child in me? Who knows?

Today I am meeting with a flute player from church. This woman is very interesting. She has pretty good skills on the instrument. At the same time she was nervous throughout our entire session on Thursday. She and her husband both have Parkinson’s. His is more advanced than hers. They met at a Parkinson’s support group. I find that very cool and romantic.

As we prepared to do some playing, she launched into a long memorized version of “I am a poor wayfaring stranger.”

After she finished playing it she told me that while she and her ex-husband had been stationed in Mannheim, Germany, she had played a beautiful flute in a shop there. She had played this same arrangement of “I am a poor wayfaring stranger” (by James Galway her hero).

Sometime thereafter she was contacted by someone from the Mannheim Symphony Orchestra who had heard her play in the shop and offered a position (an audition?). She turned it down she said because she had babies and could not stay in Germany.

She was not able to read accurately the music I put in front of her. Today we are going to go over the flute part for the choral anthem scheduled for a week from tomorrow. It’s kind of tricky. I have decided that if it’s still giving her problems today I will tell her that it’s not falling together quick enough for her to play it this time.

In the meantime I was looking for something for her to play at the beginning of communion, something to show her off and build her confidence (which is understandably kind of shaky).

Thursday, we landed on another Galway arrangement of a piece called “A Spanish Lovesong.” She only had the piano part so I photocopied it and put the flute part into a finale doc for ease of use.

Since then it has occurred to me, that the piece she played in Mannheim is probably the piece to schedule. She has it memorized and a history of performing it in public. I’ll see what she thinks of this idea today.

That way, even if the anthem flute part is not ready I will still ask her to come and play that piece at the beginning of communion and also play along on the sequence hymn for that day. During Lent there are no preludes since we begin with a gather Taize chant. Otherwise I would have her play in the prelude as well.

My blood pressure machine quit working yesterday morning. It showed error messages. After my morning audition I went to the grocery store and bought a new one. While there I took my blood pressure. It was sky high (155/99). I came home and took it with my new machine and it was 143/97 then 149/111. These are pretty high readings.

This morning I took it twice. The first time it was 157/107. After making coffee and cleaning the kitchen it was 140/104. That last one is a bit better but still high. The good news is that it looks like my new machine’s accuracy is confirmed by the grocery store machine.

I am in the middle of a stressful few days. Hopefully this trend will not continue.

I ran into a friend and regular reader of this blog at the grocery store (Hi Jonny!). He was perplexed that my blood pressure is high since I am vegetarian. I think it’s connected both to aging and my obesity.

My weight is falling a bit, but not enough. Jonny has lost weight for health reasons.

I keep telling the child in me that being old is not a bad thing. In my dreams, she weeps.

The Governing Cancer of Our Time – The New York Times

This  David Brooks article is being passed around on Fakebook. It is becoming increasingly clear that we the people are the problem, not our leaders or would-be leaders.

Here a couple sections of this article I read out loud to Eileen.

The antipolitics people elect legislators who have no political skills or experience. That incompetence leads to dysfunctional government, which leads to more disgust with government, which leads to a demand for even more outsiders.

The antipolitics people don’t accept that politics is a limited activity. They make soaring promises and raise ridiculous expectations. When those expectations are not met, voters grow cynical and, disgusted, turn even further in the direction of antipolitics.

The antipolitics people refuse compromise and so block the legislative process. The absence of accomplishment destroys public trust. The decline in trust makes deal-making harder.

The point is that we have met the antipolitics people and they is us.

The Party of ‘No Way!’ – The New York Times

This has a handy table of justices confirmed in the last year of a president.

Sedition Arrests in India Inflame Old Free-Speech Tensions – The New York Times

 Crackdowns on Free Speech Rise Across a Europe Wary of Terror – The New York Times

Malaysian High Court Upholds T-Shirt as a Security Threat – The New York Times

These three links are related. Apparently it’s not just Americans that have been scared stupid.

 

it really ties the room together

 

snow.feb.25.2016

Snow has returned to Western Michigan. It was heavy and wet. I think we are supposed to get more today. My cellist has already canceled our rehearsal for today. Local schools are closed. Another winter day in Helland.

snow.feb.25.2016.02

It is beautiful, no denying that.

snow.feb.25.2016.03

I have been taking pictures of Michigan snow since I was a young man.

02a

Jan 1970. At any rate it’s in Flint, Michigan.

07a

There you have it. Eileen ordered a rug through the mail. It came yesterday. I think it’s pretty cool.

new.carpet.2016.Feb

As they say: “It really ties the room together.”

Because of the weather I had a few absences in choir last night. They were up to their usual stuff requiring me to make an effort to be the one person in the room in a good mood. One soprano refused to move closer to the altos at my request. I don’t want to sit in front of the piano, it’s too loud, it hurts my ears, she complained. How can I get the altos and sopranos next to each other, I asked. Have them move, she responded. So that’s what we did.

I don’t know why they say running a church choir is like herding cats.

When Eileen and I left the parking lot, two choristers who are sisters were still bickering as they cleared each other’s car of the heavy snow.

jupe keeps on doing the same shit

 

Working on my Greek with the real text (as opposed to the ebook version) is much different. I have been able to reread the first 14 sections in the text with comparative ease. This makes me hopeful.

I scheduled another organ piece that will require some practice: Recessional by Francis Jackson. I chose it to sort of rhyme with the choral anthem of the day which was written by Erik Routley.

As Eileen and I work on the harpsichord I realize that I am motivated by missing playing the great literature of the instrument by the Couperins, Rameau, and the English Virginalists. It’s too bad I’m so alienated from the organ teacher at Hope. Hope owns a beautiful French double harpsichord along the lines of the one I performed on at Wayne State years ago. It’s hopeless (sic) to think that a guy who won’t accept my “friending” on Facebooger would even consider allowing me time on the instrument. Hence, I bear down on refurbishing my old clunky harpsichord. “Modernizing” is the term the instructions use.

Eileen and I did two more jacks today. That’s 4 down and 53 to go. I don’t think I’m actually “voicing” them all that much. Our goal is to get them to work consistently. That seems like a good goal because adjusting the sound can take months and is best done when actually practicing music.

G.O.P. Senators Say Obama Supreme Court Pick Will Be Rejected – The New York Times

This is the lead story in today’s New York Times. I hope these people are miscalculating in their obstruction. By that I mean, that in the long run, the nominee for the Supreme Court will be even farther to the left than Obama dare put forth. But it’s not hopeful. Trump carried Nevada’s primary. We are a country dominated by hate radio and TV.

Iran’s Hard-Line Press Adds to Bounty on Salman Rushdie – The New York Times

I’m reading the book that motivated the Ayatollah and now the hardliners in Iran to want Rushdie dead.

How Does It Feel, Chief Justice Roberts, to Hone a Dylan Quote? – The New York Times

I think it’s kind of goofy but also kind of neat that these dudes are quoting Dylan. Here’s a link to the actual usages as compiled by the New York Times:

Dylan Citings in Court – The New York Times

 

back to work on the harpsichord

 

harpsichord.feb.2016.03

Eileen and I managed to get one jack working properly yesterday. I admit that I was getting discouraged and skeptical about this project. Last time we worked on it, we had problems getting this jack to work. This time we reviewed the instructions, filed a bit off the bottom of the jack and worked on voicing the plectrum. Now it seems more doable.

harpsichord.feb.2016.02

A big part of yesterday was getting everything ready to work on the jacks again. As you can see above, a couple days ago we moved the table back into the room. Then it was a matter of getting all the tools out. I also had to work on lighting which is very important for this step.

harpsichord.feb.2016.01

This morning I skipped reading Finnegans Wake and went directly to work on my Greek. I was inspired because I received two real copies of the texts I have been working with as Kindle books. I plan to read Finnegans Wake later today, but it was certainly a luxury to have these texts as real books this morning. I’m hoping this might speed up my progress and I will be reading Homeric texts in Greek before too long.

There are 118 sections in the book. I have read 21 of them. After 22 more I will be reading Aristophanes. Homer comes later near the end of this text, but I’m hoping not too much later timewise.

Legionnaires’ Outbreak in Flint Was Met With Silence – The New York Times

I love reading about disaster in my old home town on the front page of the New York Times. Sheesh.

Pivotal Nursing Home Suit Raises a Simple Question: Who Signed the Contract? – The New York Times

A patient with Alzheimers murders another patient. Who is responsible? Certainly not the Nursing Home which has insisted that residents sign a contract agreeing to go to private arbitration and not court even in the case of murder.

Seas Are Rising at Fastest Rate in Last 28 Centuries – The New York Times

It looks like Climate Change is happening. Sorry, hate radio and brain dead dittoheads.

 Salmon Rushdie didn’t like Eco. Found him unreadable. Ahem. I do find Eco difficult and I do love Rushdie’s writing. The things you learn in an obit.
Eileen and I just finished voicing another jack. It took us 1.5 hours. Yikes.
jacks.feb.23.2016
The ones with the dampers are the finished ones. The instructions recommend that you being with middle C (on the left), then go up one octave, then another. After that you do the lower Cs. Then you do Gs sort of the way you tune.
Eileen’s sister, Nancy, asked on Vicebook how long this is going to take. If we don’t get better at it, it looks like a while.

 

 

melancholy on the monday after sunday

 

tapes.feb.22.2016

I resumed my recording project this morning.

tape.player.feb.22.2016

 

I put on a tape marked “church service.” It sounds like more of my Grandfather’s church. I couldn’t bring myself to listen to it, but I am recording it as I write.

recording.as.i.write

I’m trying not to think too much about work and yesterday’s service. It was a weird service. On Saturday, I sent my boss this incoherent email:

 

 

incoherent.email.

 

I share this because Eileen thought this was funny. I used the talk function on my tablet to write the email. I was trying to warn Jen that there was a different Kyrie in the bulletin from what I was expecting. As I hit send I remember thinking, I should have proofed that.

Oh well. I was going through the Kyrie in the bulletin when Rev Jen came into the choir room with new-improved bulletins. The new improvement was that Jen had taped in a Kyrie in all the bulletins. This is a curious procedure in my opinion. But I’m just the music guy. So we went with it.

Unfortunately, the Kyrie she taped in was not the one we had said that we would do. This is not a problem as long as she did it on purpose.

goofus.bosses

The choir was particularly rude yesterday and has left me a bit chastened. Three members were especially difficult to work with. They attempted to control how I rehearsed their part. I resisted but wondered at their rudeness. I don’t think I have much professional credibility with this group. One of these three is skipping rehearsal this week to go practice when Nick Palmer’s choral group for an upcoming concert.

gorecki.concert

Discouraging when we are so small. But on the other hand the person going needs a boost so what the fuck.

We began our service with a Taize chant as Rev Jen decided. People were standing in the back and talking loudly for most of it. Oy. I’ll be interested to see how Jen thought this went.

I know that my mood was colored by learning of Trump’s win in South Carolina.

Another triumph for ignorance brought on in part by hate radio and tv. Ay yi yi.

I think a lot about ideological bubbles these days.

I am convinced that many people are getting their news and ideas from polemically based sources like Limbaugh and Hannity. I’m not sure they have the ability to even think about how they are learning. An article coming out this week in the New Yorker echoes my own thoughts when learning that Supreme Court Justice Antonio Scalia had limited his news sources to the Washington Times and Wall Street journal. It mentions he listened to conservative radio. Who do you think he was listening to?

Looking Back – The New Yorker

Looking back at the damage Scalia did.

I stumbled at the beginning of the Passacaglia by Buxtehude, my postlude yesterday.

I quickly recovered and little harm to the piece was done. It’s not that big a deal. Only two people lasted for the entire piece: Eileen and another choir member (Phil the Methodist). I’m convinced they do so out of sheer loyalty to me. Nice.

But I’m not ungrateful, I hope. Just typically melancholy on the Monday after Sunday.