Having moved from Cardiff: these are the day to day thoughts, enthusiasms and detestations of someone coming to terms with his life in Catalonia and always finding much to wonder at!
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Thursday, November 24, 2011
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
To think I paid for it all!
There must have been a time (I can, after
all remember it) when listening to Philip Glass was not a guilty sin. Even in the generally dismissed world of
Minimalist Music he was regarded as a pioneer and someone to be respected as a
classical composer.
I say this because, having recently bought
a new Naxos disc of his music including “Light” and the “Heroes Symphony” I
think that he has descended to level of Muzak.
This reaction might come as a direct result
of my experience of “Le Grand Macabre” on Tuesday. Arriving in Barcelona at a reasonable hour,
some two and a half hours before the start of the performance, I filled the time
by dividing it by visiting El Corte Ingles and failing to find a reasonable
restaurant to while away the spare minutes.
El Corte Ingles again offered me the
tempting prospect of boxed sets of extremely desirable discs at almost give away
prices. Unfortunately, even at “give
away” prices the number of discs in each box meant that the total was quite
high.
In an uncharacteristic act of self-denial,
I resorted to my sci-fi book technique of limiting purchases and decided on one
composer and cheap prices and selected the work of Philip Glass and there, at a
unit price which was much higher than the box set offer, but much less in total
was a new disc. I bought it quickly and
left with indecent haste, lest I be tempted by anything more expensive.
I justified the expenditure on a few
grounds: firstly because I have a growing collection of Glass music and I like
it; secondly because Naxos disc are always worth buying and lastly, and most
importantly, so there could be something to look forward to hearing in the car
after staggering out of a performance of Le Grand Macabre if it was as dire as
I expected it to be.
I have been listening to the discs of Ligeti’s
opera religiously in the car to and from work.
I cannot believe there have been many doing their musical “homework” as diligently as I – and failing
signally to get to “know” the work they are listening to so much.
Le Grand Macabre is an unrewarding work to
which to listen and I was relying on the much-vaunted visual effects to make up
for the discordant and frankly messy sounds that accompanied me to work each
morning and speeded my homecoming.
Apart from a brass fanfare-like interlude;
a broken fragment of a string quartet; a chanted chorus which sounded like
people were asking for a beer in Spanish; a cacophony of car horns and a very
short interlude which sounded as though it could have developed into a real
tune – there was not much in this farrago that took my fancy.
The pre-opera meal was in a café/restaurant
on the corner of the block next to the opera house and for my €15 I got two
tapas, some bread with tomato and a glass of fizzy water. My last visit there I think!
The most impressive aspect of the
performance musically was the orchestra who were superb, though I think that
their sheer professionalism sometimes have a more polished sound to elements in
the music which were deliberately (or at least at one time in the past)
intended to be raucous. But the overall
effect was one of intense competence and they had the biggest cheer of all at
the end of the performance.
The second star was the set, the giant
crouching woman on a revolve. During the
course of the performance various parts of this giant figure opened and people
or scenes were revealed. Characters
emerged from nipples, mouth and other parts while thighs opened to reveal sets
within sets. Lights and films played
across the surface of this gigantic figure and the eyes lit up in a comically
disturbing way.
The opera was sung in English, which was an
unexpected bonus, though not all the singers were equally at home in the
language. I assume that Ligeti is not
something that is every opera singer’s cup of tea and it must be a matter of
horses for courses for his operas and I suppose that a lingua franca like
English makes the assembling of a cast that much easier. I imagine that Ligetti singers are rather
like ondes Martenot players: a small group who know each other and meet up
around the world when a performance calls for their skills. I suppose that the ondes Martenot is demanded
in something other than the TurangalĂ®la-Symphonie – but I don’t know of it. And I’m too lazy to look it up!
Yet again at the start of the second half
of the opera, the seats were noticeably more empty than they were before the
performance started – though I suspect that some of the patrons took advantage
of empty seats to improve their view of proceedings!
My favourite singer was the lady who took
the role of Venus and the Head of the Secret Police as she combined a strong,
melodic and resourceful voice with a vibrant stage presence. Otherwise, this is an opera that I will not
be making huge efforts to see again – though having bought the discs I might
well give it the benefit of another change with the images from the stage
performance still clear in my mind.
The next opera is Linda of Chamounix by
Donezetti – and I do have the month of December to get to know it, as the performance
which is the next part of my season ticket is not until January. I am not a great fan of Donezetti – but at
least it will have tunes, ornamented tune possibly, but tunes certainly!
The decision I have to make is which
version I order and listen to. I would
like a version in English, but that probably will not be forthcoming, and I am
not sure what I will gain from one of Donezetti’s opera from hearing the words
in a language I can speak. I fear that
it might be the sort of opera where the melodramatic action might be best
hidden behind the comforting cloak of Italian!
I don’t even know the famous bits in this
opera, so I might start with the highlights and work from there! If there are highlights.
Yesterday I was given on loan “Solar” by Martin
Amis and it turned out to be a jolly, if predictable read. My favourite extract occurred near the start
of the novel when the anti-hero of the story was described as a person for
whom, “The M4 demonstrated a passion for existence which he could not longer
match. He was for the B-road, a cart
track, a footpath.” A delightful
description that the rest of the novel demonstrates both is and also is not
true of the character! This novel should
come with a warning that it is not as determinedly depressing as his work
usually is! I even laughed out loud at
one point!
I have also been given in a more permanent
sense, a selection of three improving and authentically literary books to
keep. I have read all of them, but one
of them, “Rebecca” is in a Folio Society edition with excellent paper, crisp
print and obviously in hardback which is well worth keeping and I am more than
prepared to throw away/give away my paperback version.
“Rebecca” is by far my favourite of Du Maurier’s
novels and the one which repays analysis most profitably. The imagery is dense and deeply
satisfying. It will be a pleasure to
re-read this novel in such a voluptuous edition. Though I don’t like the illustrations! Small point!
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Febrile freedom fades
For the first time for five days I will
have to get up at 6.30 am tomorrow. And
I will probably arrive home at 6.30 pm after a meeting to explain how to use
the new computer “platform” for entering the most sacred thing in our lives –
examination results! And, as luck would
have it, the new season of examinations starts tomorrow so that we will have
something to put in to the new system!
Funny how things work together, eh?
Toni voted today (I am unable to vote as
these are national elections) and, though not as a direct consequence, I think
that we will probably have a new government tomorrow headed by the head of PP
the right wing party which has this election to lose, given the awful
stewardship of the so-called Socialists who have bumbled their way through the
Crisis.
The other parties have no idea what to do,
but according to the comfortable consumers who make up the student population
of my school, as soon as the right wing government is elected there will be
“lower taxes and more jobs”! I am not holding
my breath!
I have a feeling that many of those in
power today are going to have a rude awakening tomorrow. When Jack Straw was asked what no longer
being a minister was like he said, “Well, being out of power is when you get into
the back of a car and it doesn’t go anywhere!”
I fail to see what any government can do
except for continuing the austerity measures that have already been started:
higher indirect taxes; cuts in public services; continuing pay freeze in the
public sector; possible “real” pay cuts in the public sector; closures of
anything which the government feels it can get away with – and our new library
in Castelldefels continuing to be empty of books and remaining unopened!
The polling station was in the school next
to the British School of Barcelona (which is here in Castelldefels) and we had
to fight our way through a positive phalanx of police who were valiantly
guarding the integrity of the polling station by standing around and chatting
with each other. At least it keeps them
out of the bars.
For the first time ever there was no queue
at the pollo a last (the barbecue chicken place) though the quid pro quo for
that was a rather scrawny piece of chicken and dry-ish chips – thank god I had
the salad!
I have now read “Caliphate” by Tom Kratman
an interesting if disturbing novel about what the author sees as an almost
inevitable struggle between Islam and the rest.
He virtually writes off Europe as having given in to Islam on a
continental cultural level which will lead to the indigenous populations being
swamped by Islamic people. It was
written in 2007 and therefore long before the Islamic Spring, but it is a
bleakly prophetic view of what is in store for the vitiated West with its lack
of belief and its virulent (as he sees it) multi-culturalism.
I must admit that I have modified my views
on multiculturalism over the years and look back and consider the emphasis that
we placed on that aspect of education back in the days when I was active in the
NUT.
My mother always dismissed the
high-sounding rhetoric about multiculturalism as building up a teaching
resource that was really “nothing more than stories from around the world”! I think it would have been of more benefit if
we had given lip service to the concept and emphasised the acquisition of
English (which to be fair we English teachers did!) and some version of our
national literature and history more convincing than the shreds of cultural
tradition which we were able to convey.
The television programmes have started to broadcast
the beginnings of the speculation about the next government. Virtually everyone expects the right wing PP
to gain an absolute majority so Rajoy will become the next leader. Not something I relish.
At least the sun has been shining today.
Which is more than it is going to do tomorrow.
Friday, November 18, 2011
Three days to wellness!
Although it’s tempting fate, I have to say
that I woke up this morning after going through a better night than I have had
for the last few days. The sore throat
is still very much there, but I have bought more lemons and I have plenty of
honey so that problem is in the course of being dealt with. Even the sun has come out to encourage
me. All things being well, the today and
the weekend should see me back to the sort of health that will allow me to go
back to work. Sigh!
A generally good day with my being able to
sit outside in the sun for a while to give me a breath of fresh air to speed
the process of getting back to normal – but early evening is the low time when
the throat begins to play up again. It
is obviously time to go out and find some new pastilles to assuage the
irritating itch.
Going outside the house seems like quite an
adventure when I have been hunched over a computer reading trashy sci-fi
e-books!
We coughed our way through a couple of
tapas and a glass of beer and Toni bought a Christmas lottery ticket from the
cafĂ© because it ended in “31” a number about which he had dreamed, therefore
etc etc.
We are now stocked with various sweets and
drugs to counteract most of the effects of our various illnesses and can look
forward to a eucalyptus-scented couple of days!
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Situation normal?
Tuesday evening was decision time. I felt bloody awful and I had to consider
whether I was going to stick to my oft repeated but rarely followed advice to
myself that, “if you are ill – stay away from school.”
The last time I struggled in, I was asked
to do extra – and I think that decided it for the next time!
My throat felt as if it had been churned up
by an industrial cultivator, while I was convinced that my lungs had been
filled with reinforced concrete and my racking cough was enough to satisfy the
most demanding Grand Inquisitor. In
short I felt like shit.
But that was nothing to what I felt like
the next day. My throat had reached new
levels of awfulness and I got up (ironically at my usual time for rising) and
made myself a cup of honey and lemon in pure self-defence. It all honesty it was a lifesaver, it
actually did what old wives constantly tell you it will do and it soothed.
I cannot truthfully say that I enjoyed my
first day off for some time and even reading failed to do its accustomed magic
for me. By the time I was due to go to
the doctor for my appointment at six in the evening, made at nine in the
morning, I was feeling worse. And worse.
The doctor signed me off until Friday and
so I have these days plus to weekend to get better.
Yesterday I went to bed early and stayed
there until lunchtime today. The only
reason I got up was to go back to the doctor to get the “alta” – the second
piece of paper that I need to give to my school to explain and justify my
absence.
Since then I have been sitting in my chair
and coughing quietly (and extravagantly from time to time) and contemplating
the horror of going back, where, on the Monday we have an extra meeting after
school. Bienvenidos!
My paltry attempts at reading have
benefited from the rubbish that you can access in electronic form. I am still trying to recover from a
dreadfully adolescent screed called “The Lost Boys” written probably by two
female adolescents with a faulty grasp of some of the details of English
grammar and/or typing. But I read it
all, god help me, and I still don’t know why – except I do tend to read the
books I start (with the signal exceptions of “The Sound and the Fury” and “The
Golden Bowl”, though I should probably try them both again. Some year or other)
which means that I have read some real rubbish in my time.
The books that are readily available in
e-format are sci-fi and fantasy: both hit weak spots in my otherwise reasonably
snobbish literary judgement. Previously
I limited my exposure to such perniciously addictive pulp writing by limiting
my purchases to second hand copies of books by named writers under a certain
price. But technology and the Internet
combine to bring an almost unlimited supply of wordy drugs to my
fingertips.
Life can be cruel sometimes!
Tomorrow must be concentrated on getting
better – so that I can enjoy the weekend, as preparation for the return to the
daily grind.
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