The cricket season gets properly underway for me tomorrow with the first of probably only a few visits to see it in the flesh, at the recently re-branded Bowl at Southampton to see Nottinghamshire come and do the business against the local team of international mercenaries.
I don't think I've done cricketers yet so here the occasional series continues with them.
Derek Randall (pictured doffing his cap in jovial mood to Dennis Lillee) is my favourite cricketer, the maverick batsman and miracle cover point fielder. His fielding, from a purely statistical point of view, was worth 20 or 30 runs an innings but it was the almost boyish innocence and enthusiasm for batting that endeared him, as well as a few incidents involving Geoffrey Boycott. One could hardly imagine two more different characters, e.g. one was deeply endearing and the other deeply not.
We featured Basil D'Oliviera here last year when he died after a long and sad illness. But there was no more dignified and respected character that played the game. Even without his heroic back story, he was a hugely talented batsman and useful change bowler and an automatic pick for the All Time Favourite XI, or as it happens here, VI.
It might seem from old video footage on You Tube that Michael Holding was somewhat less gentlemanly out in the middle but he was playing within the rules of the game and the 1970's West Indians didn't invent intimidatory bowling. England took similar tactics to Australia to combat Bradman and both Larwood and Holding and his compatriots forced rule changes in the game because you couldn't play it nicely otherwise. And it turns out in the end that Holding was only one of several of that generation of fearsome Caribbeans who were actually very articulate and intelligent men. You don't always hear that said of their Australian fast bowling contemporaries.
We are inevitably going back to a sort of Golden Age here by taking Mike Procter next as the all action all-rounder, a potential match-winner with bat or ball, who carried an otherwise ordinary Gloucestershire side almost on his own in those days. Not quite as pretty to watch as Holding when bowling but rarely less than an exciting prospect.
Sunil Gavaskar wouldn't necessarily be immediately 'exciting' but there is something to be admired in the application of technique and the concentration required to continually put together big scores. Gavaskar's dedication to the long innings rendered him immune to an understanding of quickly accumulating runs and his effort in an early outing in one-day cricket for India was to be left 36 not out, presumably well set for the second day which wasn't scheduled, and well behind the run rate. And he is another fine and modest ambassador for the game in an increasingly cash-driven industry.
We could go in various directions for the sixth choice but I think we will come more up to date with the coolest of rulers of slow bowling practitioners and top short game batsman, Chris Gayle, perhaps the cricketer I'd most like to be. I knew quite well the feeling of the ball coming off the middle of the bat (sometimes), not having to run but watching one's handiwork disappear over the horizon. It does feel good but I don't think any of mine went as far or as often as most of his.
David Green
- David Green (Books) is the imprint under which I published booklets of my own poems. The original allocation of ISBN numbers is used up now, though. The 'Collected Poems' are now available as a pdf. The website is now what it has become, often more about music than books and not so often about poems. It will be about whatever suggests itself.
Also currently appearing at
Wednesday, 30 May 2012
Tuesday, 29 May 2012
Allegri
Allegri, Missa in Lectulo Meo, etc, Choir of King's College London/David Trendall (Delphian)
Gregorio Allegri, as every schoolboy knows, is famous for writing the Miserere that was so precious that it was not allowed to be written down outside of the Vatican. And then Mozart heard it and wrote it down afterwards from memory.
Except, like all good stories from history, it isn't quite true. What Allegri wrote seems to have been the fairly routine plainchant of the verses and the embellishments that include the sublime high C was most likely added by an anonymous chorister who got no credit for it whatsoever. And if it wasn't for that then Gregorio would hardly be remembered at all. And, although I couldn't do it, transcribing 11 or 12 minutes of plainchant might not be the prodigious feat for Mozart that it might appear and he probably wasn't the only person who did it anyway. So, there go yet more wondrous stories, ruined by the letting in of daylight on them.
And thus what remains of the rest of Allegri's output isn't much and is heard rarely. But, having wanted to have other examples of his music, the Miserere having been a venerable favourite for decades, this new release was an essential acquisition.
What it reminds me of most is Thomas Tallis. I then find that Tallis died only three years after Allegri was born - 1585, 1582 - and so they are a couple of generations apart and I'm a bit out. But then the booklet notes tell me that one reason Allegri might not have been at the forefront of his time is that he wrote in a style already old-fashioned, school of Palestrina, one generation younger than Tallis, and I don't feel so bad.
The penitential Miserere never lets one down, achingly sorrowful and reaching forlornly for elsewhere. It is given a reading here fine enough to put alongside the classic MFP release of the Tallis Scholars from so long ago I can't remember. I'm afraid it is always going to outshine the rest of Allegri but that is not to say the masses here are not worth having. I am surprised how good they are and if they are all genuinely Gregorio's own work, at least he can be credited with a place among the masters of Renaissance polyphony without the assistance of the unknown extemporizer. It's a shame that anyone should ever be regarded as a one-hit wonder. I guess that Allegri would be mystified to see how his legacy has come to be regarded 360 years after his death.
Gregorio Allegri, as every schoolboy knows, is famous for writing the Miserere that was so precious that it was not allowed to be written down outside of the Vatican. And then Mozart heard it and wrote it down afterwards from memory.
Except, like all good stories from history, it isn't quite true. What Allegri wrote seems to have been the fairly routine plainchant of the verses and the embellishments that include the sublime high C was most likely added by an anonymous chorister who got no credit for it whatsoever. And if it wasn't for that then Gregorio would hardly be remembered at all. And, although I couldn't do it, transcribing 11 or 12 minutes of plainchant might not be the prodigious feat for Mozart that it might appear and he probably wasn't the only person who did it anyway. So, there go yet more wondrous stories, ruined by the letting in of daylight on them.
And thus what remains of the rest of Allegri's output isn't much and is heard rarely. But, having wanted to have other examples of his music, the Miserere having been a venerable favourite for decades, this new release was an essential acquisition.
What it reminds me of most is Thomas Tallis. I then find that Tallis died only three years after Allegri was born - 1585, 1582 - and so they are a couple of generations apart and I'm a bit out. But then the booklet notes tell me that one reason Allegri might not have been at the forefront of his time is that he wrote in a style already old-fashioned, school of Palestrina, one generation younger than Tallis, and I don't feel so bad.
The penitential Miserere never lets one down, achingly sorrowful and reaching forlornly for elsewhere. It is given a reading here fine enough to put alongside the classic MFP release of the Tallis Scholars from so long ago I can't remember. I'm afraid it is always going to outshine the rest of Allegri but that is not to say the masses here are not worth having. I am surprised how good they are and if they are all genuinely Gregorio's own work, at least he can be credited with a place among the masters of Renaissance polyphony without the assistance of the unknown extemporizer. It's a shame that anyone should ever be regarded as a one-hit wonder. I guess that Allegri would be mystified to see how his legacy has come to be regarded 360 years after his death.
Thursday, 24 May 2012
View from the Boundary
The art of Sitcom was widely thought to be dead and probably to have died as My Family went from acceptably inane to dire. But I'm not convinced that an art form can ever be dead and Lee Mack has taken it up and made it essential viewing again. Not only that, but he forgot to turn up as Danny Baker's guest on Radio 5 a few weeeks ago on Saturday morning as if to suggest that the slacker image is one he can live down to in real life.
Would I watch it if it wasn't well written and made me laugh out loud once or twice each episode. Well, no, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I would not. My Family had a sexy girl in it as well but when I realized it wasn't funny, I stopped watching it.
At the Portsmouth Poetry Society last week, the subject was American Poets. It is the usual protocol for whoever had the idea for the meeting's theme to do an introduction to it but that person wasn't there. So I was flattered to be invited to say a few words at the drop of my hat. I think I got away with it and was glad that it developed into an open discussion that meant I wasn't required to reach a conclusion. But Doris, who I usually sit next to, wasn't sure which poets in the anthology she had brought along were American. I am nothing if not helpful in such circumstances and so picked for her a well-known piece by William Carlos Williams for the first half and then North Labrador by Hart Crane. Great poem and a welcome impetus for me to get into Hart Crane further who, as a depressed, difficult, alcoholic, young suicide ticks several very promising boxes in the poet profile. His Complete Poems arrived today and look as if they will provide the finest of bedtime reading.
It would be interesting to know how many pages of all the poetry books I have remain unread. I can't claim to be avid. I just think I know what I like and I know what I think but I'm not devoted to the subject in a way that makes me spend all night consuming poetry as if it were the very essence of life itself. It isn't that for me.
And so it makes it scary that a new, young generation of poets, born into a genre that has Paul Muldoon as a central figure is even more playful, allusive and deliberately outre than ever before. I don't know if I'm up to it. C'est magnifique, one might say, but ce n'est pas la guerre, as the cavalry are shot down by weapons from the age that was to succeed them. If I do it quietly, can I be allowed to stay with Hart Crane and poets born before, say, 1965.
But, then again, it's always been like that. Every generation has been welcomed in as if they were new and sexy and nothing that had come before them was relevant any more. Thom Gunn was as cool and sexy as the Elvis Presley and Beatles that he took the trouble to write about, famously turning 'revolt into a style', but at that stage he did it in iambic pentameter.
I'm yet to be convinced that anything drastically important has happened beyond some young people wanting to wilfully assert their newness, a phenomenon that has always been with us. Only the very best poets have alerted us to their significance and potential importance before they were 30. Muldoon and Gunn were two of them. It might be wise to give the latest crop a chance to prove themselves. It can be very damaging to be told you are destined for great things before you've achieved them.
I know that.
Monday, 21 May 2012
Alan Hollinghurst's Books
I'm sure I'm not the only one who, when a writer or other intellectual-type is photographed for a newspaper in front of a bookshelf, spends more time looking at the books than the person. They usually have a few titles you can make out, often the bigger art books. I'm the only person in the country, it seems, who doesn't own a big volume of Klimt.
This picture of Alan Hollinghurst was in yesterday's Observer. It was more generously cropped in the paper so that one could see two more shelves higher than this internet version, and two more below. As luck would have it, this turns out to be predominantly the poetry section of Alan's well-stocked library and he has them in alphabetical order of author and so, once I'd got started, I knew what I was looking for. For example, books by his friend Andrew Motion are just above his left elbow, the orange volume being the memoir, In the Blood. Heaney is to the left of his head as we look; Hughes (Lupercal, Wodwo, etc) is two shelves below; Lowell is two shelves below him; Thom Gunn is just out of shot here, just above and to the left of Alan's head, with the Collected clearly visible and then, once you know, most of the individual volumes readily identifiable.
So, Hollinghurst is unlikely to be bettered in the competition for who has the most books that I also have, the most similar collection, although his inevitably more comprehensive than mine if less completist on specific favourite poets. There was another prize once for who had picked the closest selection of Desert Island Discs to what I would have but I'm afraid I've forgotten who that was.
It's probably a bit impolite in other people's houses to immediately start to scrutinize their books while making a token effort to keep the conversation going but I move on eventually. And then start rifling through their CD's.
Sunday, 20 May 2012
Bad Day at the Wapentake
Bad Day at the Wapentake
The word is Scandinavian and
refers
to the brandishing of weapons
to signify assent in a popular
assembly.
Cloud is
heavy on the hills,
a late
snake moves slow
through
long grass.
Whey is
being stirred thick
in an
outhouse
and sullen
children in the yard
are not
inclined to misbehave
as their
grisly father pours
a dark
measure of ale
and
loosens his belt.
Local
men gather to oppose
a
motion. Pikes glint
in the
Autumn light,
dumb
cudgels are not counted
and then
they don’t vote no.
Friday, 18 May 2012
Bach Motets
Bach Motets, Monteverdi Choir/John Eliot Gardiner (Soli Deo Gloria)
Why would the cover of a new edition of the Bach Motets feature a tightrope walker. It's hard to believe J.S. had time to practice doing that in between writing all those cantatas and fathering so much progeny. We are being encouraged to think about a fine balance, one would think. It might be a hint towards correcting the supposition that Bach is simply a mathematical perfectionist.
While the baroque style is clearly elaborate and apparently more disciplined than later Romantic composers who indulged in more self-indulgent expression of their overflowing passions as 'individuals' became more highly valued than the application of formal principles, it isn't fair on either side to regard Bach and his contemporaries as abstract pattern-makers or C19th composers as lacking order in composition.
So, if we prefer to, we could read the picture as a sign of great daring or an act of trust in God. Whatever it is, if we like it, art is often much better enjoyed rather than over interpreted and I sometimes think it better if it doesn't have to mean anything defintive.
(Having evetually read the notes in more detail, I find that John Eliot Gardiner writes that 'Bach expected of his singers an instrument-like virtuosity and the agility of a tightrope-walker, never more so than in the motets.' So I need not have wondered. But I'm not editing out and wasting all that introduction now, three days later).
Johann Sebastian's massive and immaculate output wouldn't necessarily miss these 72 minutes of music if he hadn't written them whereas if someone else had, they might be the centrepiece of a very respectable reputation. There are small continuo parts in places but this is choir music for all intents and purposes, wonderfully clearly recorded and if at times offering broad hymn tunes, also gorgeously intricate and cool in texture. Cool and warm, I'd say, if I wanted to undermine the whole idea of describing music in words and showing the whole art of music reviewing for the nonsense that it sometimes is. It sometimes seems like looking at a painting on the radio.
German can sound like a hilariously funny language to us Englanders but it never does in these settings. There's a wide range of thoughts and emotions here from one piece to the next, I'd rather not reduce them to 'moods'. Gute Nacht, o Wessen, is gentle and sympathetic while actually saying,
Good night, O you
who have chosen the world;
I do not love you.
whereas Weicht, ihr Trauergeister is a sweeping hymn line advising you spirits of sadness to go hence. The booklet's notes tell us that most, if not all, of these pieces are regarded as being written as 'funerary motets' and, if so, you can't help but appreciate the confidence with which their authors face their worldly demise. It can be a fine and noble thing to regard the world as unworthy if it can be done with the proper sense of decorum but it does rather depend on the gamble that there is something better to be had elsewhere. That thought doesn't seem to have troubled these writers.
The notes also refer to 'another example of Bach's unlimited cleverness' which hasn't ever been in doubt but which I take on trust and appreciate by absorbing it in smooth helpings rather than having any chance of being able to explain. He is one of those very few whose music would take an eternity to tire of if he was all you had on the desert island.
This is also a stylish release in that the disc is contained in a pocket at the back of a CD-sized hardback booklet so tastefully done that I might sleep with it tonight. It wouldn't honestly be among the first Bach music one might have to have but once you have some cantatas, concertos, violin sonatas and partitas, cello suites, the Well Tempered Klavier, the Mass in B Minor, the Passions, etc. then this wouldn't be a bad thing to put alongside them. There is something routinely wonderful about it.
Why would the cover of a new edition of the Bach Motets feature a tightrope walker. It's hard to believe J.S. had time to practice doing that in between writing all those cantatas and fathering so much progeny. We are being encouraged to think about a fine balance, one would think. It might be a hint towards correcting the supposition that Bach is simply a mathematical perfectionist.
While the baroque style is clearly elaborate and apparently more disciplined than later Romantic composers who indulged in more self-indulgent expression of their overflowing passions as 'individuals' became more highly valued than the application of formal principles, it isn't fair on either side to regard Bach and his contemporaries as abstract pattern-makers or C19th composers as lacking order in composition.
So, if we prefer to, we could read the picture as a sign of great daring or an act of trust in God. Whatever it is, if we like it, art is often much better enjoyed rather than over interpreted and I sometimes think it better if it doesn't have to mean anything defintive.
(Having evetually read the notes in more detail, I find that John Eliot Gardiner writes that 'Bach expected of his singers an instrument-like virtuosity and the agility of a tightrope-walker, never more so than in the motets.' So I need not have wondered. But I'm not editing out and wasting all that introduction now, three days later).
Johann Sebastian's massive and immaculate output wouldn't necessarily miss these 72 minutes of music if he hadn't written them whereas if someone else had, they might be the centrepiece of a very respectable reputation. There are small continuo parts in places but this is choir music for all intents and purposes, wonderfully clearly recorded and if at times offering broad hymn tunes, also gorgeously intricate and cool in texture. Cool and warm, I'd say, if I wanted to undermine the whole idea of describing music in words and showing the whole art of music reviewing for the nonsense that it sometimes is. It sometimes seems like looking at a painting on the radio.
German can sound like a hilariously funny language to us Englanders but it never does in these settings. There's a wide range of thoughts and emotions here from one piece to the next, I'd rather not reduce them to 'moods'. Gute Nacht, o Wessen, is gentle and sympathetic while actually saying,
Good night, O you
who have chosen the world;
I do not love you.
whereas Weicht, ihr Trauergeister is a sweeping hymn line advising you spirits of sadness to go hence. The booklet's notes tell us that most, if not all, of these pieces are regarded as being written as 'funerary motets' and, if so, you can't help but appreciate the confidence with which their authors face their worldly demise. It can be a fine and noble thing to regard the world as unworthy if it can be done with the proper sense of decorum but it does rather depend on the gamble that there is something better to be had elsewhere. That thought doesn't seem to have troubled these writers.
The notes also refer to 'another example of Bach's unlimited cleverness' which hasn't ever been in doubt but which I take on trust and appreciate by absorbing it in smooth helpings rather than having any chance of being able to explain. He is one of those very few whose music would take an eternity to tire of if he was all you had on the desert island.
This is also a stylish release in that the disc is contained in a pocket at the back of a CD-sized hardback booklet so tastefully done that I might sleep with it tonight. It wouldn't honestly be among the first Bach music one might have to have but once you have some cantatas, concertos, violin sonatas and partitas, cello suites, the Well Tempered Klavier, the Mass in B Minor, the Passions, etc. then this wouldn't be a bad thing to put alongside them. There is something routinely wonderful about it.
Against Science Fiction
Against Science Fiction
They say one day they’ll come and find
us, them in their sleek, gleaming sputniks;
us stranded on our beautiful, lost
rock that’s somewhere in the outskirts,
not wanting to know, trying
to shoot them down
with our quaint, old-fashioned guns.
All the years that we have sat here,
rained on by brief meteorites
if we’re lucky, and we think so,
gazing lonely at a vacuum,
all that bleak, dark, endless madness
(is it thus or do we just see
reflections of ourselves in it),
did we spend them in hope or fear
or would we rather see as intruders
those who might represent some wisdom
that we’ve not arrived at yet.
Is it not vain, and self-regarding,
to think that each flicker of light
that we suppose we might have seen
is a sign of their arrival.
But, if it was (and we will remain
both watchful and credulous),
should we not be so
in love with the quite unlikely,
knowing life is chemistry,
and only that. But if they’ve found
their way here to us, who haven’t yet
travelled beyond the moon,
they’re not Gods
but they must be cleverer than we could know
and obviously speak English.
Friday, 11 May 2012
World Chess
http://moscow2012.fide.com/en/
This seems to be the place to go for coverage.
Nigel Short with his friend Dirk have been marvellous commentators today. I hope it will be like this for the next few weeks.
If these commentaries remain available on the website, Game 1 is worth some of your time. Not just for the game, in which Anand seems to make the early running, then Gelfand has definite chances but the draw was probably most likely all the time. The chess commentary and insight is wonderful, with Nigel in fine form with his wider wisdom, not having to pass comment in the aftermath of one of his own games.
But his memoir of Mikhail Tal, who he once played, on the subject of physical well-being with regard to intellectual games is a useful counterbalance to the argument that you need to swim five miles a day or you'll never finish the Times crossword. Tal was the least healthy person he ever met.
But, a little bit surprisingly, it's great to find these specialist chess gurus, with their unfathomable depths of understanding of the Grunfeld Defence able to talk appreciatively about art as well as chess. Duchamp, I think, is quoted as saying that not all artists are chess players but all chess players are artists, but, most gratifyingly for me, Dirk quotes Duchamp saying that 'to be a painter you do not necessarily have to paint.' I'm glad to hear that.
Top entertainment on the internet now that television has become almost redundant.
This seems to be the place to go for coverage.
Nigel Short with his friend Dirk have been marvellous commentators today. I hope it will be like this for the next few weeks.
If these commentaries remain available on the website, Game 1 is worth some of your time. Not just for the game, in which Anand seems to make the early running, then Gelfand has definite chances but the draw was probably most likely all the time. The chess commentary and insight is wonderful, with Nigel in fine form with his wider wisdom, not having to pass comment in the aftermath of one of his own games.
But his memoir of Mikhail Tal, who he once played, on the subject of physical well-being with regard to intellectual games is a useful counterbalance to the argument that you need to swim five miles a day or you'll never finish the Times crossword. Tal was the least healthy person he ever met.
But, a little bit surprisingly, it's great to find these specialist chess gurus, with their unfathomable depths of understanding of the Grunfeld Defence able to talk appreciatively about art as well as chess. Duchamp, I think, is quoted as saying that not all artists are chess players but all chess players are artists, but, most gratifyingly for me, Dirk quotes Duchamp saying that 'to be a painter you do not necessarily have to paint.' I'm glad to hear that.
Top entertainment on the internet now that television has become almost redundant.
Wednesday, 9 May 2012
World Chess Championship
Anand-Gelfand, Moscow, May 10
You could be forgiven for not knowing that the World Chess Championship begins tomorrow, in Moscow.
For several reasons the game doesn't quite seem to have the edge of the Fischer-Spassky match of 1972 that captured the attention of many of us at the time.
It's difficult even to find a quote from a bookie on the internet, interest in it seems so low, but if the 9/10 I did see about Vishy Anand is really available, then if you can get on, I would.
He hasn't been recording big scores in recent tournaments but I think that is not because he's past it and clapped out but because he has been preparing for this match and is not giving away any of his preparation.
I like him a lot. He is not one to wander off or about the stage when I've seen him but he stays, looking at the board. Why wouldn't you want to look at your own position rather than see how everybody else is getting on. He is hard to beat and in a match rather than a tournament, that is a very important thing.
This seems to be a place one can watch from, http://www.anand-gelfand.com/games. It doesn't look like it is going to be front page news.
But with Ronnie O'Sullivan quite a class apart in the snooker last week, finding a mental equilibrium to complement his massive talent; with Mark Cavendish as World Road Race Champion; with Spain, the best football team since at least Brazil 1970, as champions of that and England somehow statistically miraculously still World Champions of test cricket then it would be proper for Anand to retain the chess title so that at least 5 sports have the right people in place.
You could be forgiven for not knowing that the World Chess Championship begins tomorrow, in Moscow.
For several reasons the game doesn't quite seem to have the edge of the Fischer-Spassky match of 1972 that captured the attention of many of us at the time.
It's difficult even to find a quote from a bookie on the internet, interest in it seems so low, but if the 9/10 I did see about Vishy Anand is really available, then if you can get on, I would.
He hasn't been recording big scores in recent tournaments but I think that is not because he's past it and clapped out but because he has been preparing for this match and is not giving away any of his preparation.
I like him a lot. He is not one to wander off or about the stage when I've seen him but he stays, looking at the board. Why wouldn't you want to look at your own position rather than see how everybody else is getting on. He is hard to beat and in a match rather than a tournament, that is a very important thing.
This seems to be a place one can watch from, http://www.anand-gelfand.com/games. It doesn't look like it is going to be front page news.
But with Ronnie O'Sullivan quite a class apart in the snooker last week, finding a mental equilibrium to complement his massive talent; with Mark Cavendish as World Road Race Champion; with Spain, the best football team since at least Brazil 1970, as champions of that and England somehow statistically miraculously still World Champions of test cricket then it would be proper for Anand to retain the chess title so that at least 5 sports have the right people in place.
Chateau David
Chateau David, Bordeaux Superieur 2010, Sainsbury's £ 6.49
It hasn't occured to me to review wine here before. Had there been such a thing as my website in the 1990's then perhaps I'd have done it then, concerned as I was with the spicy redolence of the superstar, Fetzer Zinfandel, or the long finish of an Haut Medoc. It was Pauillac that I regarded as a special treat in those days and I only drop these few names to show that I did once know my way around France in terms of red wine and knew when to say 'cherry', 'blackcurrant' or 'top notes of creosote'.
I don't bother with that so much anymore. It's more, Chilean Merlot @ £ 3.99, a means to an end.
But I still have the bottle, now empty of course, of Vida Nova 2001, 'from the vineyards of Sir Cliff Richard' which I was grateful to my sister for finding for me then. It might be 11 years ago now but I seem to recall it being enjoyable in an appropriately middle of the road sort of way.
Alors, today, I selected a bottle of Chateau David. Anybody would, wouldn't they, if a bottle of wine had their name on it. And what of it, then.
It's not immediately fascinating but I'm only on the second glass. It is sometimes preferable to get to the bottom of a bottle before one finds oneself more in the mood to congratulate its producer, to have the wine become more a part of you, to live more within it.
It is Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon and Franc and I'd think the Sauvignon was the major party in this coalition. The dry depth is there more than anything too flirtily fruity. I can't say I'm getting much of the vanilla the label is telling me to appreciate. Perhaps it will benefit from laying down. I know I often do.
Neither can I say that at this price, which isn't exorbitant I must admit, it is doing a great deal more than the bog standard Chilean Merlot. I think Fetzer is still available in a number of places and for seven quid, you'd be better off with that. I like to support the Old Country in wine when I can but it has long been recognized that in this price bracket they aren't very competitive any more.
I'll be glad to come back and correct my first impressions if the experience improves but I'm afraid this bottle is so far seeming a bit like its namesake, living on past glories and unconvincing, not as good as it would like to claim to be.
Arthur Miller - Presence
Arthur Miller, Presence (Bloomsbury)
I meant to get this book when it came out, which it says here was in 2009. I didn't quite get round to it then but hearing one of the stories on the radio recently was a useful reminder. Bringing together two volumes of short stories with Homely Girl, A Life, it is ostensibly the Complete Short Stories.
The pieces vary in length from 50 pages to miniatures of just a few, and in subject matter but all of them serve to enhance Miller's already enormous reputation for those who know him as a very major C20th playwright by showing just what a fine fiction writer he was, too.
The Misfits might be most familiar as the original of a film. The story of desperado teamwork hunting mustangs in the wild is perhaps worthy of Hemingway for its machismo and raw nature. Perhaps we admire the the roughnecks making a living with such virile expertise but I hope I'm right in finding sympathy for the wild horse victims of their savage industry as the natural reaction.
I Don't Need You Anymore is an account of rites of passage, a young boy uncomprehending of adult ways and shamed and anguished by finding that he is not quite a part of that world yet.
I doubt if I'd be the first to feel that labelling Miller and Marilyn Monroe as 'the egghead and the hourglass' was a rather extravagant bit of double stereotyping in which surely both were somewhat more than those things. These are stories of great depth and naturalism, art of a high order and not overly intellectual except for their great literary technique. They are not out of place alongside the best of C20th American fiction, whether you think like I do, that that means Richard Yates, Raymond Carver and Salinger or others.
The Bare Manuscript is one of several pieces here, each very different, that carry a genuine erotic charge, in which a writer advertises for a model whose body he can use as the medium for composition. The title piece is shorter, involving a misunderstanding that might be but isn't attempted voyeurism. Bulldog is only partly about a 13 year old boy going to buy a pet dog that his family cannot afford. The kid's encounter with the woman he buys it from is one that he keenly ponders his chances of repeating on whatever pretext. Miller is brilliant in expressing the tension and the mind of his characters in each.
Perhaps the best, for its political context as well as its narrative involvement, is The Performance in which a tap dance troupe touring Europe are offered an alarming amount of money to perform for Hitler, who is impressed and thinks that tap dancing would be a fine thing for young Nazis to do for healthy exercise. It is made to seem that their Jewish identity would not be picked up by the screening they would have to undergo to take up a lucrative long-term contract taking tap to the reich. But having sailed so close to a very dangerous wind, they make their escape.
I'm glad I was reminded to get this book. I haven't read all the stories yet. It would be no surprise to find a few more equally impressive things among them. Arthur Miller was surely one of the most important dramatists of the C20th. That he might have been as highly regarded as a fiction writer had he cared to do more of it is easy to say but that doesn't mean it isn't worth saying.
I meant to get this book when it came out, which it says here was in 2009. I didn't quite get round to it then but hearing one of the stories on the radio recently was a useful reminder. Bringing together two volumes of short stories with Homely Girl, A Life, it is ostensibly the Complete Short Stories.
The pieces vary in length from 50 pages to miniatures of just a few, and in subject matter but all of them serve to enhance Miller's already enormous reputation for those who know him as a very major C20th playwright by showing just what a fine fiction writer he was, too.
The Misfits might be most familiar as the original of a film. The story of desperado teamwork hunting mustangs in the wild is perhaps worthy of Hemingway for its machismo and raw nature. Perhaps we admire the the roughnecks making a living with such virile expertise but I hope I'm right in finding sympathy for the wild horse victims of their savage industry as the natural reaction.
I Don't Need You Anymore is an account of rites of passage, a young boy uncomprehending of adult ways and shamed and anguished by finding that he is not quite a part of that world yet.
I doubt if I'd be the first to feel that labelling Miller and Marilyn Monroe as 'the egghead and the hourglass' was a rather extravagant bit of double stereotyping in which surely both were somewhat more than those things. These are stories of great depth and naturalism, art of a high order and not overly intellectual except for their great literary technique. They are not out of place alongside the best of C20th American fiction, whether you think like I do, that that means Richard Yates, Raymond Carver and Salinger or others.
The Bare Manuscript is one of several pieces here, each very different, that carry a genuine erotic charge, in which a writer advertises for a model whose body he can use as the medium for composition. The title piece is shorter, involving a misunderstanding that might be but isn't attempted voyeurism. Bulldog is only partly about a 13 year old boy going to buy a pet dog that his family cannot afford. The kid's encounter with the woman he buys it from is one that he keenly ponders his chances of repeating on whatever pretext. Miller is brilliant in expressing the tension and the mind of his characters in each.
Perhaps the best, for its political context as well as its narrative involvement, is The Performance in which a tap dance troupe touring Europe are offered an alarming amount of money to perform for Hitler, who is impressed and thinks that tap dancing would be a fine thing for young Nazis to do for healthy exercise. It is made to seem that their Jewish identity would not be picked up by the screening they would have to undergo to take up a lucrative long-term contract taking tap to the reich. But having sailed so close to a very dangerous wind, they make their escape.
I'm glad I was reminded to get this book. I haven't read all the stories yet. It would be no surprise to find a few more equally impressive things among them. Arthur Miller was surely one of the most important dramatists of the C20th. That he might have been as highly regarded as a fiction writer had he cared to do more of it is easy to say but that doesn't mean it isn't worth saying.
Thursday, 3 May 2012
Noce Blanche
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wgrnpq7g4U
You Tube is remarkable.
Film is not a subject often approached on this website but I find that my favourite film is available here in its entirety.
I have it on video but don't ever watch videos any more. But, since I've watched it at least eight times and with various people, but not in recent years I'll be interested to see if it is still as heartbreaking as I first thought. A film is no good at all if it doesn't make you cry.
I was only reminded of it in passing, thinking that this evening my friend remarked that although he had reservations about the Terry Eagleton books I'd lent him, he could see why The Gatekeeper was a big favourite of mine. Many years ago, another friend said very much the same thing about this film.
You Tube is remarkable.
Film is not a subject often approached on this website but I find that my favourite film is available here in its entirety.
I have it on video but don't ever watch videos any more. But, since I've watched it at least eight times and with various people, but not in recent years I'll be interested to see if it is still as heartbreaking as I first thought. A film is no good at all if it doesn't make you cry.
I was only reminded of it in passing, thinking that this evening my friend remarked that although he had reservations about the Terry Eagleton books I'd lent him, he could see why The Gatekeeper was a big favourite of mine. Many years ago, another friend said very much the same thing about this film.
Wednesday, 2 May 2012
Gregorian Chant from Pluscarden Abbey
The Liturgy of Easter from Pluscarden Abbey
This website has one or two contacts that you might not have expected, one of which is Fr. Aelred, a monk in Pluscarden Abbey in Scotland, who was kind enough to send a copy of this new disc from that Benedictine monastery.
A few decades ago, Gregorian Chant made up a large part of what many of us knew of 'Early Music'and then it was adopted by the New Age people as a meditative accompaniment to the miscellany of fads and baloney that they accumulated into a lifestyle.
The increased availability of a wider range of medieval music and earlier, plus the retreat of New Age fashion into less visible enclaves, has allowed chant to resume its proper role in monastic life.
The notes on this disc tell us that on Easter Day,
death was swallowed up by life; the reign of Satan was broken...heaven was thrown open , and sadness and sorrow gave way to unending joy.
Would that it were, except to say that bereft feelings of 'sadness and sorrow' are generally more productive of great art and there are those among us who might honestly yet begin to tire of 'unending joy' after a while.
I'm bound to say, as a very inexpert admirer of chant, that it is one of those forms of music in which one piece sounds very much like the others to the less well informed. All the work of recording and editing was done here by monks at Pluscarden, my friend not being among those with a voice of sufficient quality to perform. It captures a warm and intimate sound, soft and atmospheric in the requisite way. For all that the text would have been given a more varied and dramatic setting by Bach or James MacMillan, it is given disciplined and concentrated expression here, not in monotone or to soporific effect but with metrical variation and organ in places, including a short solo by Pachelbel.
It was a nice package to come home to, not something one expects or often gets. It will sit nicely alongside my other Pluscarden disc, the Liturgy for St. Columba.
http://www.pluscardenabbey.org/home.asp
This website has one or two contacts that you might not have expected, one of which is Fr. Aelred, a monk in Pluscarden Abbey in Scotland, who was kind enough to send a copy of this new disc from that Benedictine monastery.
A few decades ago, Gregorian Chant made up a large part of what many of us knew of 'Early Music'and then it was adopted by the New Age people as a meditative accompaniment to the miscellany of fads and baloney that they accumulated into a lifestyle.
The increased availability of a wider range of medieval music and earlier, plus the retreat of New Age fashion into less visible enclaves, has allowed chant to resume its proper role in monastic life.
The notes on this disc tell us that on Easter Day,
death was swallowed up by life; the reign of Satan was broken...heaven was thrown open , and sadness and sorrow gave way to unending joy.
Would that it were, except to say that bereft feelings of 'sadness and sorrow' are generally more productive of great art and there are those among us who might honestly yet begin to tire of 'unending joy' after a while.
I'm bound to say, as a very inexpert admirer of chant, that it is one of those forms of music in which one piece sounds very much like the others to the less well informed. All the work of recording and editing was done here by monks at Pluscarden, my friend not being among those with a voice of sufficient quality to perform. It captures a warm and intimate sound, soft and atmospheric in the requisite way. For all that the text would have been given a more varied and dramatic setting by Bach or James MacMillan, it is given disciplined and concentrated expression here, not in monotone or to soporific effect but with metrical variation and organ in places, including a short solo by Pachelbel.
It was a nice package to come home to, not something one expects or often gets. It will sit nicely alongside my other Pluscarden disc, the Liturgy for St. Columba.
http://www.pluscardenabbey.org/home.asp
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