Artist Ian Bode – The Passenger

After music, I love the graphic arts, photography, film and almost any variation thereof.

Graphic artists, like Ian Bode, fascinate me. I am not filled with envy, but with wonder at their ability to transform a blank canvas or an ordinary sheet of paper into something living, thought-provoking or transformative. How on earth do they do it?

Painting or drawing is about seeing, so I’m going to let Mr. Bode’s work speak for itself. Click through the slideshow above while listening to the interview. You’ll see “the passenger” and a  four-paneled sketch followed by the final result.

Mind-Body Connection, Pt. 1: To Begin Again

We begin again, constantly.~ Robert Fripp

Pain is a powerful motivation.

The pain I am experiencing is causing me to re-evaluate many things. Pain areas, specifically my back, are causing me some alarm. Each movement, even remotely involving bending forward, or a wrong twist at the hips, is carefully considered because any wrong turn could send electric-like shocks through my back that cause subsequent immobility.

Back issues, specifically those debilitating lower back lightning bolts, were first experienced my freshman year of college. Bending over to reach some socks, my lower back froze up and to the floor I went. Try as I did, the floor was where I stayed until those muscles relaxed. Young and invincible, how could this happen?

As if that weren’t enough, a new malady has arisen in the past year.

Now there is mysterious shaking of my right arm as it relates to guitar playing. Simply plucking a string with finger or plectrum now produces an tremulous wobble.  The guitar has been a part of my life, both professional and personal, for over four decades. How can I overcome this devastating new obstacle before it becomes debilitating?

Luckily, I’m a pragmatic optimist living in a time when help is easily available. First was to seek pain relief without pills. Pills are not a cure, nor do they explain cause. They only dull mind, body and connection to life itself.

Enter massage therapy.

" It's a cleansing process. It really is. And if you can let go of being self-conscious, it can be a very freeing and emotional relieving space and time for that person."

Traci Levine is a Licensed Massage Therapist who works at The Folded Leaf, a place where yoga, massage and other wondrous mind-body activities abound.

My first massage was revelatory. I had no idea how much tension had come to “rest” in my back. The release of this tension and pain was a bit beyond description. For example, Traci worked on my Teres Major and Minor – muscles more-or-less near your shoulder blade. As she worked out the knots of tension, it felt like my muscles were on fire-not quite pain, but not really pleasure either.

When she first started, I wasn’t wholly convinced that this was going to be beneficial, let alone a lofty “transformative.” Somewhere, I let go and let her hands guide me where she wanted me to go. I lost track of time, place and person.

The after-effect was immediate and powerful: my muscles did not exist, bones felt like air, and it was difficult to re-inhabit my own body. I.e., walking was awkward. “Drink plenty of water, ” was her admonition. My muscles had been in a state of tension for so long that the release was substantial and real as I was sore for about three days.

It turns out, like most disciplines or professions, there’s a lot more involved than anyone might think. I interviewed Ms. Levine in January of 2014.

Then, the proverbial apple fell upon my head: with aging taken into the equation, what if I was the cause of my own problems?

This is a mind-body issue. I am operating on old habits, automatic behavior, not at all mindful of my own body. I do virtually no bodily maintenance (stretching, exercise) and am, in effect, absent. If we have no attention or focus in our lives, then things just happen to us. We effect no change. We are absent.

What? How could we not know our own bodies?

It turns out we know very little about ourselves; including our minds.

Next: Alexander Technique.

New Music Concert – Kanawha Forum 2.0

Flutist Lindsey Goodman is full of energy.

When I called her a dynamo, at first she looked puzzled, but I explained that I meant that she was full of enthusiasm, energy and drive. Just hearing about her performing and teaching schedule makes me want to take a nap.

But she is more than just a person with enthusiasm. She is a professional musician on a mission. This mission is her passion since she was 18 years old. Her mission is contemporary music.

Say “contemporary” music and some people, metaphorically, run screaming out of the room. Some of them still do it literally, but with all the variety in today’s music, the days of “Train Wrecks in C Sharp Minor” are mostly music of the past.

"New music is my life's calling. I firmly believe that if there's no music of the present, there can be no music of tomorrow."

There is no unified school of thought in this new millennium, no “ism” that can adequately summarize the style of concert music today. It’s a wide range of sounds, procedures and compositional choices.

WVSO flutist Lindsey Goodman has put together a new music series in cooperation with Kanawha United Presbyterian Church in Charleston.  The three concert series featuring a variety of contemporary works is called Kanawha Forum 2.0.

Here’s Lindsey to talk about it:

Oh, the Hipsters Lie!

Music snobbery comes in many forms, but it operates under two basic principles.

The first is that a hipster assumes that they know about bands you couldn’t possible know about and therefore you are much less hip than they. Secondly, once everyone knows about a band, their music or their “hipness,” is no longer viable as they have “gone commercial.”

Jimmy Kimmel has done a social experiment. When a camera and a mic are present, what will they say when asked about fictional bands?

The result is a scream:

The "Dissonant" Mozart

Salieri: I was staring through the cage of those meticulous ink strokes – at an absolute beauty.

I can’t say I’ve been on a Mozart kick, but some coincidences make me wonder.

The fabulous film, Amadeus, has been in my DVD player for a while. I marvel at the sheer virtuosity of its costumes, the sets, the magnificent acting of F. Murray Abraham who plays the burdened Salieri and of course, the storyline.

This film transformed my life in a single evening. Afterwards, one of my Peabody colleagues sneered, “It didn’t work,” but I was left bewildered. The point of the film wasn’t to be biographically or musically accurate (I.e. Mozart did not dictate his Requiem from his deathbed.), but it shows how envy can consume a person’s life and destroy their soul.

All that aside, today on Classical Music, we heard Mozart’s “Dissonant” string quartet. As some of you already know, classical nicknames are a pet peeve of mine, but at least the term “dissonant” has some relevance.

Credit Public Domain
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Hmmm… these opening bars go way out there.

I found this really interesting lecture on this piece that I thought I’d share.

The link is here.

Winter Music

"There's a certain slant of light, On winter afternoons, That oppresses, like the weight Of cathedral tunes." ~Emily Dickinson

Our musical tastes are often governed by the seasons. This natural process takes place without fervor nor fanfare.

So, what then is “winter music”? What music speaks to you more clearly during the frosty season? I’m not talking merely about Christmas music, but what music seems to be in accord with the snow, ice and the deep freeze?

Some suggested hibernal listening:

George Crumb-Night of the Four Moons

Crumb’s music is full of such crystalline sounds (crotales, cello harmonics, flutter-tongue flute technique) that inevitably I associate this ode to the Apollo moon landing with subzero temperatures. Although we all know that the 1969 moon landing took place in July, I can’t imagine a colder, more desolate landscape-musical or otherwise.

Per Norgard – Winter Hymn

When winter comes, you can bet that I will playing this on my show. Norgard’s text painting and his use of passing dissonance perfectly encapsulates a wintry mood:

The passing year will pass its deep. So shall our mind reach winter's sleep.

Fripp and Eno- Evening Star

It’s hard to believe that this electronic album was created 38 years ago because there is a timeless quality to it. Tracks on side one (There used to be a thing called vinyl records, kids.) are a serene testament both to the guitar playing skill and taste of Fripp and the immaculate production and keyboards of Eno.

Side two, called An Index of Metals, is a twenty-eight minute David Lynch-like drone poem in existential angst. Be sure you’re ready for that ride before boarding. My advice: keep things mellow, calm and centered.

David Sylvian – Blemish

Sylvian’s heartfelt reaction to his bitter divorce was channeled into music and thus Blemish was born. The result is an album with great warmth within its crackling, humming and sometimes bleak landscapes. It’s a true musical paradox and center stage is Sylvian’s tremendously emotive voice.

John Cage – In a Landscape

This may seem at odds with mellow, indoor music listening, but pianist Stephen Drury has chosen the “accessible” pieces from the man everyone loves to hate- John Cage.

Flow with the title track or the Eastern Music For Marcel Duchamp. Bacchanale may awake you from your reverie, so no sin to skip this one.

Philip Glass- Music in 12 Parts

One of the great things about winter is watching the snow fall, inside with a cup of rich and smooth cocoa. Grab a hot beverage, sit by the window and watch the endless patterns. I’m serious.

Not all of Glass’ monumental 12 part ensemble workout are suitable for snow watching, so my suggestions are two:

1. Put Part 1 on endless loop and stare out at the falling snowflakes.

2.  Parts 1, 5, 9, 11 and 12 can be programmed. The sheer kinetic energy of these pieces will match the wild winds outdoors and all those magic flurries.

No list can ever be complete, so I stop here. Remember, listening to music doesn’t really accomplish anything; at least, nothing we can measure in the field of achievement. What it does give you is some YOU time and can revivify the soul.

That needs attending to as well.

 

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