Friday, December 11, 2009
ANDRE KERTESZ' PHOTOS
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Monday, December 7, 2009
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Serpentine Dance
Inspired by dancer Loie Fuller's famed skirt dances, in which colored lights projected onto her billowing garments, this film (and others like it) was hand-tinted to achieve similar affects. Fuller's solo was mesmerizing, and her copycat film subjects no less so.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
A TORD GUSTAVSEN TRIO Playlist
All About Jazz reviewer John Kelman put the trio's distinctive character beautifully: "As silence can sometimes speak as loudly as thunder, and insofar as careful elaboration of melody can be just as compelling as more vivid expansion, Gustavsen's trio makes a clear case for the elusive power of restraint."
Gustavsen phrases it romantically, that his music is "about loving every note". It is this very tendency of playing what you like, rather than what you ought to play between passages, together with the elaborated yet elegant lyrics of the tunes, that creates this unique aesthetic and the kind of feeling you will not have very often in reality, but in dreams."
Here's a playlist of his three albums so far, not including the several in which he collaborated with Silje Nergaard. Like the best ambient music, this can be a marvellous accompaniment to a relaxed evening, rarely insisting on attention, but truly rewarding it if given.
It's not all contemplative; check out track 009 to see how funky he can be..
Friday, September 18, 2009
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Roshan Kumari's Famous Dance from "Jalsaghar"
(I made this clip by stringing together the dance scenes, removing other shots that are interspersed through the dance, so there are a few jerky splices.)
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Early Cambodian Dance
Sunday, August 9, 2009
You Are the Peace
Here's her beautiful rendition of "Du bist der Ruh" from her CD of Schubert Lieder. Play it loud and revel in the full and warm tone. As one critic so rightly says, "Fink's voice has an affecting fondness that makes one listen when perhaps the innate familiarity of the music might otherwise lend to distraction. The old becomes new, and the new is perceived in a more favorable light."
"There is an amazing tension in this work. Rückert’s language wells with passion and is plainly a composition of temporal love. But Schubert has transposed the work into an ethereal world of spirit and faith with music which is a marvel of simplicity, classical and romantic at once–music that soothes like a balm applied to an open wound. The song is haunting." http://snipurl.com/pis3u
Below, an original translation of Friedrich Rückert’s poem.
Du bist die Ruh,
Der Friede mild,
Die Sehnsucht du
Und was sie stillt.
Ich weihe dir
Voll Lust und Schmerz
Zur Wohnung hier
Mein Aug und Herz.
Kehr ein bei mir,
Und schliesse du
Still hinter dir
Die Pforten zu.
Treib andern Schmerz
Aus dieser Brust!
Voll sei dies Herz
Von deiner Lust.
Dies Augenzelt
Von deinem Glanz
Allein erhellt,
0 füll es ganz!
You are the calm,
The restful peace:
You are my longing and
what makes it cease.
With passion and pain
To you I give
My eye and heart
Are yours to live.
Enter here and close
Quietly behind you
the gates of your
Gentle embrace.
All other grief
You dispel from my breast:
My heart swells
With the love of you.
Your brightness alone
Lights the canopy of my eyes
Oh, fill it fully!
–Friedrich Rückert, Du bist die Ruh (1822)
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Saturday, July 25, 2009
More Beautiful Tarkovsky
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Monday, July 13, 2009
1000-Armed Kannon... version 2
Here's the earlier version, somewhat different, but also spectacular!
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Magdalena Kozena at her best
So few people know and appreciate Bach's Cantatas, the 200 or so of which constitute one of the greatest treasure troves of western music. I am particularly fond of many of the arias for the soprano and alto voice, and none so embodies the depth and beauty of Bach's vocal/ensemble writing as this aria from Cantata 199, "Tief gebuckt und voller Reue".
I can't get enough of this performance of it by the outstanding Czech mezzo-soprano, Magdalena Kozena. I wish I could find the words to describe the feeling it conveys: resignation-cum-compassion-cum-joy? It's all there somehow in the main motif, the A-F#-E-D-D cadence.
To quote (as a composite) comments from reviewers:
"But the real surprise was Gardiner and Magdalena Kožená...Good lord, what a lot of feeling she pours into the singing! ...Gardiner..doesn't rush this aria--or she doesn't LET him rush. It's slow and gorgeous..., since there's no vibrato to artificially thicken the texture. It's like pure sunlight cascading through stained-glass. I can imagine Kožená gesturing with her hands as she sings --so much emphasis does she put into particular words, it's heartrending. I have never heard Gardiner accompany an aria with more sensitivity...for once he laid aside his very British stiff upper lip, and wore his heart on his sleeve. I have never, ever heard Gardiner play like this. It was a shock, and a delightful surprise..."
Please play this as loudly as your neighbours can tolerate, to get the full quality of her vibrant and pure voice, and the warmth of the ensemble playing. Please also pay particular attention to the arc from 4:12 to 5:33. Brings tears to my eyes every time, as indeed do many subsequent moments...and it's nothing to do with religion, despite the church setting.
The whole cantata is wonderful; ask me even a little bit nicely, and I'll make more if not all of it available.....