Thesis: To consider what the chance intersection of ideal beauty and intellectual confusion would mean in determining the fate of Earth. Phase 1: While touring San Francisco, I stayed at the Sir Francis Drake. The bartenders were adequate. Phase 2: I began a blog. I learned romance might exist, but depends upon whether a man and a woman can tread the maze individually and reach its center at the exact same instant in time. Phase 3: The center comes and goes as if it were a mirage.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Music & the way we are .... or were
You and I both, buddy ....
While the band Foreigner never was among my favorites, over the years some of the group's songs most certainly have been -- and, "I Want to Know What Love Is" tops my list. Listen to it and see if you do not agree. This is pretty darn good music coming from another one of those mean, nasty, raunchy rock and roll outfits, right?
Louis Grammatico, better known as Lou Gramm, had a powerful voice as a young man, but it faded over the years, as do the looks, bodies and, yes, even the voices of so many of us. Having a brain tumor reportedly had more to do with these changes in Gramm than did the natural processes of aging but, in the end, only the effects matter, not the process which created them.
Here are two renditions of this lovely love song, both live, the first from a 1985 concert and the second about 17 years later, at a 2002 concert. In a way, it is sort of sad watching the second version, with Gramm's less resonant voice, but absolute determination to give it his best effort. To quote our old and dear friend, Alfred, Lord Tennyson: "O death in life, the days that are no more."
Song : "I Want to Know What Love Is"
Recording No. 1 -- live performance, 1985
Recording No. 2 -- live performance, 2002
This one is for me ....
Without a doubt, I love "Ride of the Valkyries" from Richard Wagner's thunderous opera, "Die Walkure" = "The Valkyrie." It is the second of four operas that form "The Ring of the Nibelung." After briefly mentioning operas a few days ago, I thought I would add this note: I can safely say this is one opera I would love to attend. I am not certain more powerful music than this exists.
Possibly, my addiction to it stems from my Norse/Germanic ancestry. Perhaps, it simply comes from the audacity and the strength of the music. Whichever makes no difference. The music brings to mind the tale of a Viking telling a priest, "I believe in the strength of my own right arm." That goes for me, too.
For those not familiar with this mythology/religion, Valkyries are maidens who ride to battle fields to collect the bodies of the slain who died bravely, and then to escort them to Valhalla, the great hall of the chief god, Odin. This collection process is what is happening in this scene from the third act.
The presentation we are watching here, of course, is not a full stage production with costumes and choreographed movements. It is an orchestral arrangement, with the performers-singers (the Valkyries) all in a row, content to allow their voices and their facial expressions to tell the tale. The location of this event, the orchestra and the singers are unknown to me.
Incidentally, I need not personally worry about making it to Odin's great hall at Valhalla. The goddess Freyja already has promised me that I will have a seat in her great hall at Folkvangr. Freyja, among other things, is the goddess of love, beauty, fertility, war, battle, death, magic, prophecy and wealth. I think I have it made.
Opera: "Die Walkure" by Richard Wagner Song: "Ride of the Valkyries"
Hello :) I loved the Foreigner...great song. Took me right back to 1985 :)
As for the Valkyries, I think the story is interesting but I don't really like that kind of opera singing. My very favorite singer is Cecilia Bartoli...she has the voice of an angel or Anna Nebretko, so beautiful and fun to watch :)
It's always fun to expand my musical horizons though...you seem to have a special talent for that:)
Sad for me, Natalie, maybe not for all. Sad to see the young man with the vibrant, powerful voice in the first video, and then to watch the same but older man in the second video, who after nearly two decades, has faced aging and illness, and tries so hard to be what he once was, the man he will never be again.
You went right back to 1985? I might need a guide to get myself back that far, but I think I see Lake Superior and a canoe somewhere on the screen of my time machine.
The "Valkyries" really put it on the line, do they not? I think simply listening to the music is the best part of this, but it is fun to see it done with the singers on stage like in this video, and even more fun to see the stage production with full costuming and acting.
Thank you, Kelly, for appreciating my musical offerings
I remember when I was 12 or 13, we had dancing evenings, discos, in primary school quite often. And this song was played very often, usually at the end of evening. And I wanted to fall in love, but I could not, so I thought I may be strange or something. But I put this song to the bottom of my heart, and decided that it can wait there for the right time, and the right man. It is very beautiful song, thank you for playing it, Fram.
Valkyrie is a very unusual opera, I really like it, sometimes I like Wagner very much. Although I would say there is more powerful music. With the very different power, but the greatest from the greatests - Bach. Meister Eckhart, Dogen, Shakespeare and Rilke of music. Leonardo and Michelangelo of music. Rafael of music. And much more than that. But I would agree that Wagner can give us unforgotten experience of a human power. Thank you very much for today's music feast. I wish you good afternoon and evening, handsome Wolf :-) Bye, bye.
Well, I do not know about you, Natalie, but I intend on leaving the field kicking and yelling and fighting, and generally believe that athletes and singers and cowboys should retire at the top of their game, rather than go out with a limp and a whimper and a tear in their eye.
I have absolutely no doubt that you will fall into lasting love at the right time and with the right man and while hearing the right song playing in both your mind and your heart. Just to slip into the wisdom of religion for a moment, as Ecclesiastes recognizes: "To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven."
I am very pleased the song has significance for you, Mag.
My knowledge of ballet is zero; my knowledge of opera is miniscule; my knowledge of other arts covers little beyond the basics. This is where I rely on the knowledge of people like you to point me in the right directions and to advise me on the right standards to establish bench marks. In the meanwhile, I think I will be satisfied to base my shivers from the Nibelung quartet on my Norse/Germanic lineage.
Oh, dear, this Foreigner definitely tops my list, too! I was, 14? 15? when I first heard it. It got me a few girlfriends as you may imagine a guy with a good command of the English language in college (high school for you) translating the lyrics in a lady's ear would surely take advantage of (especially the bit about 'I want you to show me'). That Wagner is so powerful that it almost blew up my laptop screen. Please, be careful next time otherwise I will have to account for broken school equipment.
I Wanna Know What Love is - great. I remember seeing the original video back in the eighties, when I was very, very young, and loving it. It does bring back good memories.
Valkyrie... I'm ashamed to admit that despite being half German and classicly trained amateur musician I'm not a fan of Wagner... I love other Germans though, Beethover is my all time favourite.
Can you imagine yourself standing on a stage and singing that song, CiL?
I am of an age when parking in a car by a lake or atop a rise of land with a pretty young lady was every teenage boy's favorite hobby. Whoever thought of putting radios and tape decks in cars deserves the thanks of a grateful nation.
Yes, "old Richard" knew how to raise the roof, more than anything else.
I will miss your comments here and the posts on your page while you are on your holiday.
It makes me happy that hearing this song by Foreigner stirred pleasant memories within you, Polly.
It makes sense that Wagner would not be among composers favored by everyone. I recall hearing him fairly often when I was a boy, but when he came into my mind as a permanent resident was while I was watching and hearing and feeling an artillery barrage during the night. Some of his music is sweet, but I think of it mostly in martial terms.
Bachelor of Arts with a double major in English (= literature) and history (= reality). Master of Arts in literature. Once upon a time, U.S. Marine Corps = Semper Fidelis. These things pretty much explain everything there is to know about me.
Other than that, ask, if you actually are curious .... I like to drift where the current takes me within this endless sea of blogs, read what others write in their blogs, observe, learn, question and, hopefully, understand, while offering a few comments of my own along the way .... by the way, the photo of me actually is me .... was me .... will be me .... hmmmm ....
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4 years ago
Romance, from Fram
I discovered Romance might yet exist, but it depends upon whether a man and a woman can tread the maze, individually, and reach its center at the same moment in time.
The Actual Instant of Love, from Fram
I am a jealous guy, of the sort John Lennon sang about. Any man who says he is not a jealous guy either has no genuine depth of feelings for the woman he is saying it about or is a liar. I can remember very distinctly, for example, when my feelings for my wife vanished. It happened in an instant. When love vanished, so did jealousy.
Actual love happens in an instant, I believe, although it does not always seem to be that way. I am not talking about "love at first sight," but, rather, "love at first instant." This means two people might have known each other for weeks, even for years, before the "instant" occurs. It comes with a single sentence spoken by one, or a single action taken by one, that strikes the other like lightning.
Affection grows; love is born. Love also disappears in an instant, I believe, although it does not always seem to happen that way. Incidental to my point, I do not believe in "love at first sight." That is no more than simple, physical or emotional attraction, which is the cause of countless and never-ending problems.
Happiness is momentary, from Fram
When I was age eighteen, a wise, old man of twenty-six told me that happiness is a momentary thing. It might last for minutes or days or weeks or, sometimes, even for a few years. But, like life itself, happiness is a transitory thing and, like fate, it is capricious. At some point along the road, I came to realize this wise, old man had been right.
The Three Sorts of Friends ....
Though friendships differ endless in degree, The sorts, methinks, may be reduced to three. Acquaintance many, and Conquaintance few; But for Inquaintance I know only two -- The friend I've mourned with, and the maid I woo!
Samuel Taylor Coleridge poet & philosopher Fragment 10: "The Three Sorts of Friends"
Time retains ....
Time retains its sacred right to meddle in each earthly affair. Still, time's unbounded power that makes a mountain crumble, moves seas, rotates a star, won't be enough to tear lovers apart: they are too naked, too embraced, too much like timid sparrows.
Old age is, in my book, the price that felons pay, so don't whine that it's steep: you'll stay young if you're good. Suffering doesn't insult the body. Death? It comes in your sleep, exactly as it should.
When it comes, you'll be dreaming that you don't need to breathe; that breathless silence is the music of the dark and it's part of the rhythm to vanish like a spark.
Wislawa Szymborska poet, essayist & translator Nobel Prize for Poetry 1996 "Entropy"
Yesterday is History ....
Yesterday is History, 'Tis so far away -- Yesterday is Poetry -- 'Tis Philosophy --
Yesterday is mystery -- Where it is Today While we shrewdly speculate Flutter both away.
Emily Dickinson poet "Yesterday is History"
Never the answers
The most interesting thing in the world is another human being who wonders, suffers and raises the questions that have bothered him to the last day of his life, knowing he will never get the answers.
Will Durant historian, philosopher, teacher
The equality of man
Those who hammer their guns into plows will plow for those who do not.
Thomas Jefferson president, patriot, free thinker
The audience
Better to write for yourself and have no public than to write for the public and have no self.
Cyril Connolly writer, editor, literary critic
I am free
I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do. Robert Heinlein science fiction writer philosopher
Marine Corps Forever, from Fram
To all Marines, those among the dead, those who still live, those yet to be born: Semper Fidelis, to the end of time ....
Have gun .... will travel
Once upon a time: "She said, There is no reason ...."
Time & again ....
Time .... he's waiting in the wings .... he speaks of senseless things .... but, if you could heal a broken heart, wouldn't time be out to charm you?
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12 comments:
Re: Foreigner
If it is sad watching the second version, I will not.
Love it. Powerful. Made me think of 1985… Thank you, Fram.
Hello :) I loved the Foreigner...great song. Took me right back to 1985 :)
As for the Valkyries, I think the story is interesting but I don't really like that kind of opera singing. My very favorite singer is Cecilia Bartoli...she has the voice of an angel or Anna Nebretko, so beautiful and fun to watch :)
It's always fun to expand my musical horizons though...you seem to have a special talent for that:)
Sad for me, Natalie, maybe not for all. Sad to see the young man with the vibrant, powerful voice in the first video, and then to watch the same but older man in the second video, who after nearly two decades, has faced aging and illness, and tries so hard to be what he once was, the man he will never be again.
And, where were you in 1985?
You went right back to 1985? I might need a guide to get myself back that far, but I think I see Lake Superior and a canoe somewhere on the screen of my time machine.
The "Valkyries" really put it on the line, do they not? I think simply listening to the music is the best part of this, but it is fun to see it done with the singers on stage like in this video, and even more fun to see the stage production with full costuming and acting.
Thank you, Kelly, for appreciating my musical offerings
But dear,
… aging, illness, disabilities - isn’t it the fate of every one of us!?!??!?!
I remember when I was 12 or 13, we had dancing evenings, discos, in primary school quite often. And this song was played very often, usually at the end of evening. And I wanted to fall in love, but I could not, so I thought I may be strange or something. But I put this song to the bottom of my heart, and decided that it can wait there for the right time, and the right man. It is very beautiful song, thank you for playing it, Fram.
Valkyrie is a very unusual opera, I really like it, sometimes I like Wagner very much. Although I would say there is more powerful music. With the very different power, but the greatest from the greatests - Bach. Meister Eckhart, Dogen, Shakespeare and Rilke of music. Leonardo and Michelangelo of music. Rafael of music. And much more than that. But I would agree that Wagner can give us unforgotten experience of a human power. Thank you very much for today's music feast. I wish you good afternoon and evening, handsome Wolf :-) Bye, bye.
Well, I do not know about you, Natalie, but I intend on leaving the field kicking and yelling and fighting, and generally believe that athletes and singers and cowboys should retire at the top of their game, rather than go out with a limp and a whimper and a tear in their eye.
Magdalena ....
I have absolutely no doubt that you will fall into lasting love at the right time and with the right man and while hearing the right song playing in both your mind and your heart. Just to slip into the wisdom of religion for a moment, as Ecclesiastes recognizes: "To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven."
I am very pleased the song has significance for you, Mag.
My knowledge of ballet is zero; my knowledge of opera is miniscule; my knowledge of other arts covers little beyond the basics. This is where I rely on the knowledge of people like you to point me in the right directions and to advise me on the right standards to establish bench marks. In the meanwhile, I think I will be satisfied to base my shivers from the Nibelung quartet on my Norse/Germanic lineage.
Oh, dear, this Foreigner definitely tops my list, too! I was, 14? 15? when I first heard it. It got me a few girlfriends as you may imagine a guy with a good command of the English language in college (high school for you) translating the lyrics in a lady's ear would surely take advantage of (especially the bit about 'I want you to show me'). That Wagner is so powerful that it almost blew up my laptop screen. Please, be careful next time otherwise I will have to account for broken school equipment.
Many thanks.
Greetings from London.
I Wanna Know What Love is - great. I remember seeing the original video back in the eighties, when I was very, very young, and loving it. It does bring back good memories.
Valkyrie... I'm ashamed to admit that despite being half German and classicly trained amateur musician I'm not a fan of Wagner... I love other Germans though, Beethover is my all time favourite.
Can you imagine yourself standing on a stage and singing that song, CiL?
I am of an age when parking in a car by a lake or atop a rise of land with a pretty young lady was every teenage boy's favorite hobby. Whoever thought of putting radios and tape decks in cars deserves the thanks of a grateful nation.
Yes, "old Richard" knew how to raise the roof, more than anything else.
I will miss your comments here and the posts on your page while you are on your holiday.
It makes me happy that hearing this song by Foreigner stirred pleasant memories within you, Polly.
It makes sense that Wagner would not be among composers favored by everyone. I recall hearing him fairly often when I was a boy, but when he came into my mind as a permanent resident was while I was watching and hearing and feeling an artillery barrage during the night. Some of his music is sweet, but I think of it mostly in martial terms.
It is always nice to see that you have visited.
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