Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Music's Master Architects

 


I went to a performance of the Phoenix Symphony Friday evening and found myself totally immersed in the music.  I love classical music anyway but there was something very moving about this particular performance.  The first piece was a new piece by Valerie Coleman who has been named one of the top 35 Women Composers.  After that we heard Beethoven's Concerto No. 5 played with Stewart Goodyear at the keyboards.  His nimble fingers criss-crossed the keyboard many times but I have to admit that his posture was making my neck and back hurt just watching him.  (Just watch the first 20 seconds on the link above and you will see what I mean.) I snapped the above photo while we were waiting for him to enter the stage.

But the music that really got to me was Shostakovich's Symphony No. 5.  The schedule of performances and the pieces were all selected long before there was a war in Ukraine and since Shostakovich was a Russian composer, the orchestra played the Ukrainian National Anthem before beginning the symphony.  The anthem is a beautiful piece if you haven't heard it.

Shostakovich had his own troubles with the tightly controlled Stalin regime and his symphony did such a good job of conveying that balance between what the artist wanted to write and what the state made him write.

I really felt the emotion of the music.  A little over a year ago, I read the book "A Gentleman in Moscow".  It was an excellent book and the images it conveyed have stuck with me.  Shostakovich's Symphony No. 5 conveyed exactly those same images.  It could easily be the theme music for that novel.  


Friday, June 5, 2020

A Tale of Three Books


Since the pandemic lockdown started, I've been doing a lot more reading and watching movies.  That's probably the same as many of you.  The last three books I've read all stuck with me but for vastly different reasons.  I thought I'd mention them.

A Very Stable Genius is of course all about you know who.  It was a difficult read, not because of the excellent writing but because reliving all the political upheavals, vindictive behaviors and borderline treasonous actions just compounds the misery we've had to live through these last few weeks.  I do think it was interesting to learn what went on behind-the-scenes around each ire-inducing event.  The amount of red-faced temper tantrums that go on every day in the White House makes it seem more like a day-care center than the home of the leader of the free world.

After finishing the above book, I wanted to read something much lighter and more entertaining.  I grabbed a copy of one of Sophie Hannah's revivals of Agatha Christie.  The book is called Closed Casket and it followed the standard Christie playbook making it vastly entertaining.  There was one line in the book spoken by a main character, that jumped off the page at me.  It reads: "You see, in the normal run of things, people who lie as easily as they breathe never admit it.  They have an endless capacity to invent new lies to explain the old ones.  It is not a moral problem, in my opinion, so much as a mental illness."  I bet you can guess why that jumped out at me.  It's an almost perfect description of the guy written about in the first book I listed.

The third book I just finished is called The Dreamers.  The funny thing about this book is that I just picked it off of my 'need-to-read' stack without giving it much thought beforehand.  When I started reading it, I thought to myself "this might not be the best book to read at this time" but it was too late.  I was hooked.  It was published before this pandemic arrived but it pretty much describes everything we are going through right now, mysterious virus, everyone in masks, quarantining, closing of businesses, makeshift hospitals, conspiracy theories, people rebelling and so on.  It's all there.  I wonder if Ms. Walker had some kind of premonition that led her to write this book.

Three vastly different books all linked together by the events of today.  I think I'll look for something much lighter to read next.  After all, just reading the newspaper these days raises the blood pressure!

Friday, June 29, 2018

Traveler's Bookshelf


My good friends Julie and Dave are avid world travelers.  In fact, they are in Namibia right at this moment.  I kind of wish I could be there with them.  That is one place I'd love to visit.  I took this photo at their house one night in a place were they have some memorabilia from their Asian travels on the wall.  This row of books go right along with their collection of memories.