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Buoy the population of the soul
Toward their destination before they drown
~ Robert Pinsky
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Saturday, 17. June 2006

Where Do We Go?



Dante in his Hell Had nine circles For the damned.

Here the number is twenty two, Inverted, going up into the sky, Arranged in a building painted The color of shit.

Here old crawl up the death spiral, And the young begin to swell up With the seeds of despair.

Look at Mother! How beautiful She is in the candle light! How tasty this meal will be Salted with her fresh tears!

Look up and you will see Vultures circling, circling. Look deep into these eyes To hear songs still unsung. So let's join them and sing.

Few lines in response to, and for, Tatiana Cardeal's striking photographs on Prestes Maia.




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Tum Pukar Lo Tumhara Intezar Hai - Gulzar



Call on me, for I wait to hear your call, while night selects dreams for the restless night in which I wait for your call.

My lips should keep chanting These phrases of heartache, tell me for how many more insomniac nights? What phrases, you ask? “I love you. I wait for you.”

And the heart has to be distracted with the thought that my sorry state is, perhaps, yours too, on such nights of disunity waiting for unity.

Call for me.

Translated from the Hindustani, approximately




Translations

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Music Post - On Pianos



I think I saw my first piano in a movie, if my memory is not too ossified, in a weepy Telugu/Tamil movie for which Illayaraja had scored music for, "Hrudayam". I suppose as music directors for Indian movies went, one had to have a degree of affinity to directly use Western Classical music motifs in their work, for which Illu has credentials aplenty. Also any one remembers the Bach violin solo he deploys the Telugu movie, "Swaranakamalam"?

Pianos, because of their shape, size and exoticness, were are as remote to me as the moon. I remember being suitably awed, and perhaps, mildly envious when my mother after a rare trip to the United States, brought back pictures of a house she was invited to that displayed a spankin' grand piano in the living room. This envy was somewhat assuaged by the very basic Casio synthesizer I had managed to get out of that trip taken by my mother as an offering. My father subsequently arranged a few music lessons too with that rare uncle who didn't think music was for the pansies. Not that anything came out those few lessons; practicing scales and deciphering notes in four ruled notebooks required much patience and discipline that I didn't possess then, and perhaps, don't even now. Oh well! This simply adds another thing to the torture list for the future spawn: unasked for piano lessons.

I had wait until I came to here to the United States to finally meet a grand piano, a Miss. Steinway. And was she beautiful! And because of my youthful sins of omission I had to be content with just giving her a peck on the keys, i.e., play half remembered scales. I also realize now because of the lack of musical education and application on my part, I can't deploy the musician persona, which always seems to have stronger effect on ovaries than a mere poet or writer persona!

Jokes aside, one of the first tapes I rented in the first few months here was of "The Piano", with the lovely Michael Nyman score. "The Heart Asks Pleasure First" is a stunning theme for a movie, and Flora dancing to this music on the beach is an unforgettable sequence of visuals, which stands out in the many movies I have seen. Of course this movie, somewhat justifiably I think, has been criticized for romanticizing the native in opposition to the quotidian “massa”, who asks for, and gets a piano haunted mail-in bride.

Subsequently I fell in with my old friend T here, who had played both the piano and the organ at a church for many years. And he got me started on the piano repertoire with Glenn Gould and his opus of piano performances, notably those of Bach's Goldberg Variations. He also took me along to a few piano recitals. Given this, now piano is not as strange a beast as it once was in my imagination. End of post.

This evening you may enjoy playing:

Beethoven's transcendental 'Moonlight Sonata' & Chopin's Nocturne in C-sharp Minor




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