Back to Bach, Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

Music for reflection in a world full of pain and suffering Bach The year is winding down. What do we think of when we look back ? Personally, some of us have had good, joyful experiences---births, marriages, success in careers but, on a global perspective, there is the other side. The havoc of the tsunami in South Asia Massacre in Darfur President Bush's war in Iraq ("I am a war president", "Bring 'em on") Atrocities in Beslan, Madrid, Moscow, Abu Ghraib The march of AIDS Millions of people died horrible deaths, lost their homes, and are facing starvation and disease. Bach composed Cantata No.131 (said to be his first cantata) in 1707 in memory of the victims of the devastating fire in Arnstadt. He was 22 years old. I think it is especially appropriate for these times as it was then. “Aus der Tiefe rufe Ich, Herr, zu dir” (Out of the depths I cry to thee, O Lord). The CD that I like is by Virgin Classics, Collegium Vocale Ghent conducted by Philippe Herreweghe. Great voices and music. I am not religious; I do not pray. Hard to explain my attachment to Bach’s music. A major part of his compositions consists of choral music, sacred and secular. The sound of Bach soothes my spirits, makes me look at the world in a hopeful way. Some of the songs written by the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore (Nobel laureate 1913) also give me a peaceful feeling. However, for me Bach is No.1 A few other CDs I would recommend: The Goldberg Variations (BWV 988) by the late, great Canadian pianist Glenn Gould The Well Tempered Clavier. I have Book I performed by the pianist Andras Schiff,and Book II performed by Glenn Gould. Both excellent Die Kunst der Fuge BWV 1080(The Art of the Fugue), Musica Antiqua Köln, Reinhard Goebel. Archiv Produktion Toccatas, BWV 910-916, played by Glenn Gould The Complete Cello Suites (BWV 1007-1012) by Yo Yo Ma. The recording by Mstislav Rostropovich is said to be superior. The CD of Pablo Casal‘s performance is also great. And two oddities (bits of pop): Percussion transcriptions of Bach’s English & French Suites by the Safri Duo (Chandos Records) New transcriptions for guitar by Philip Hi (1995 GSP Recordings) “You are the music while the music lasts.” ----T.S. Eliot Comments Anonymous — 2005-01-08 BAch has nothing to do with religion. He's beyond religion. I had a tape of "Jesu" for my wedding and I'm a Buddhist. :) No bettah stuff. hugs, f

December 29, 2004 · 2 min · musafir

A Stained, Blue Dress from Gap and "Operation Iraqi Freedom"

Our money, our children,brothers,sisters, parents,and friends Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr’s investigation of President Clinton’s peccadilloes cost us $33,555,000 William Jefferson Clinton, 42nd president of the United States, survived the impeachment proceedings but the records of his two-term presidency will forever be overshadowed by his dalliance with Monica Lewinsky. Costs of “Operation Iraqi Freedom” (make me gag every time I come across the words): In human terms, as of December 22, 2004 U.S. Soldiers dead: 1329 Injured: 10,041 The numbers are from global security.org http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/iraq/casualties.htm Now look at the dollar figures. NPR Morning Edition “December 16, 2004: The Congressional Budget Office projects that the cost of the war in Iraq could surpass $80 billion in fiscal 2005. That would send total expenditures for the war past $200 billion. The estimated price tag for the conflict has steadily escalated” $200,000,000,000 and the end is not in sight George W. Bush, who took the nation to war, was reelected to serve a second term ! "The absurd is the essential concept and the first truth." ----Albert Camus (1913-1960, Winner of 1957 Nobel Prize for Literature) Comments The Pedgehog — 2004-12-30 I found it strange that you did not include the estimated number of Iraqis dead. That would have made your poitn even stronger. musafir — 2009-10-14 I have published numerous posts about Iraqi casualties, especially about deaths of innocent civilians. But nothing changes. Now it is Afghanistan where the civilian population -- regardless of where their allegiance lies -- is paying a price. According to reports, drones have been successful in the war against terror. Perhaps so. The civilian casualties are described by us as 'collateral damage'. On the other side of the coin are the surviving civilians who have lost family members and friends. One wonders how many of them turn out to be suicide bombers.

December 27, 2004 · 2 min · musafir

Children of the Fallen (SHNS 12/15/04)

Innocence Lost: The Hidden Casualties of the Iraq War http://shns.com/shns/warkids.html Much has been written about the war in Iraq. This item from the Scripps-Howard News Service covers a part that we don't see or hear much about. Whether you are for or against the war, spend some time reading it. Outstanding report by Lisa Hoffman and Annette Rainville of SHNS. The link (above) will take you to the article and photographs. "War is not good for children and other little things" ----Vietnam era anti-war slogan.

December 26, 2004 · 1 min · musafir

Hypocrisy Of The Champions of Moral Values

"GOP Corporate Donors Cash In on Smut" Is the title of an article by Terry M. Neal in today's Washington Post. This link will take you to it. Read about the morality crusaders and their appetite for X-rated videos and shows on prime time TV that depict a world completely different than what they profess to believe in. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A15644-2004Dec21.html A friend, KCR, has coined a good phrase to describe the hypocrites: Mandarins of Morality (MOM). "The Moral Majority is neither moral nor a majority" ----Mike Clark, Reporter, Memphis,TN (1981) Comments Anonymous — 2004-12-23 Splendid work, sir, even if it did leave me quite nauseated. :) The Bin Laden piece further down belongs in a threesome with Safire's and Ms. Dowd's recent fantasies. Carry on regardless, deep bow, f

December 22, 2004 · 1 min · musafir

Iraq - Death Toll Mounts

The tragedy continues The death toll keeps rising. Our soldiers are dying in battles and killing Iraqis. Iraqi insurgents (they just keep coming) are killing all who are within range of their bombs and guns. Strangely, the high number of Iraqi civilian casualties (see the link below to a BBC report) does not receive much attention from our mainstream media. "Collateral damage"? I am aware that there are people who believe that our soldiers are dying for a just cause. At first, the reason given for attacking Iraq was that Saddam Hussein was stock piling WMD for use against us. Now we are there,ostensibly,to ensure freedom and democracy for the Iraqi people. Count me among the skeptics. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1hi/world/middle_east/3962969.stm Many observers feel that the current situation in Iraq is not one under which fair elections can be held yet President Bush insists on a January 30th deadline. "Baghdad Burning" is the title of a blog by a young Iraqi woman. Worth taking a look. http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com "Any man's death diminishes me" (John Donne). In this holiday season let us think of peace.....lasting peace for all people. "Patriots always talk of dying for their country and never of killing for their country." ----Bertrand Russell "Nations have recently been led to borrow billions for war; no nation has ever borrowed largely for education. Probably, no nation is rich enough to pay for both war and civilization. We must make our choice; we cannot have both." ----Abraham Flexner, American Educator(1866-1959)

December 22, 2004 · 2 min · musafir

Maximum City - Bombay Lost And Found by Suketu Mehta

A Close Look at Bombay's Underbelly Suketu Mehta's Maximum City Suketu Mehta’s book grabbed me from page one. I went through the 540 pages in three days. Powerful writing. Mr. Mehta succeeded in bringing Bombay---the Bombay that tourists and occasional visitors are completely unaware of---to life. The gang leaders,bar girls,politicians, and the people who have made Bollywood famous,all parade through the book and tell their stories. Mr. Mehta was fortunate to have the right connections to reach them but he described the meetings in an unique manner and succeeded in making the sights, smells, and sounds come alive. Think of paintings by William Hogarth and Hieronymus Bosch. Mr. Mehta made it clear that he disliked the trend in India of changing names of cities and streets. It was not Mumbai but Bombay that he wrote about. To him it would always be Bombay. The graphic descriptions of violence and the squalor were repelling. As were the narratives of hit men who talked with cold detachment about their victims. The pervasive influence of leaders of the underworld and corruption among all levels of law enforcement personnel left me with a sick feeling. Between bar girls who made more money (and did so without taking off their saris) than strippers in New York City; their patrons who literally threw money at them; and the idols of the screen who were controlled by gang leaders, the city seemed to be a jungle inhabited by people without any compunction, all bent on pursuit of money, power, violence, and sex. Mr. Mehta was born in Calcutta but lived in Bombay until the age of 14 when he became a resident of Jackson Heights,New York City. His love for Bombay comes through despite the ugliness that he portrayed. There could be other cities (perhaps in the former Soviet Republic) where the same kind of “law of the jungle” prevails. Calcutta, where I once lived, is another city with a dirty underbelly. Corrupt politicians,not gang leaders, call the shots there. V.S. Naipaul's “An Area of Darkness”, written after his first visit to India in 1962, received a lot of flak from critics in India. Among other comments, Naipaul wrote “Indians defecate everywhere”. It is interesting that more than 35 years later Mehta, too, couldn’t escape the fact and wrote that each day about 2.5 million kilos (5,511,556 lbs!) of shit was left by residents of Bombay who used outdoor locations due to lack of access to toilet facilities. He remarked that while the flats in his building were kept spotlessly clean, the public spaces (halls, stairways) were filthy and strewn with garbage. Some things never change in India. I remember spending three weeks in Bombay in the summer of 1989. I geared up for a run on my first morning and stepped out of the hotel on Marine Drive. The oily, slate-grey water of the Arabian Sea, the stench and the garbage pushed me in the opposite direction and that is what I did during the rest of my stay----ran through business district and residential areas, away from the promenade. Yet, thousands of people gather there every morning and, I guess, find pleasure in walking along the promenade. India has made gigantic strides in the field of software engineering and is becoming a power house in Asia. China's burgeoning economy has made it the top dog but India is not too far behind. One wonders though about the very visible open drains and slums that are like suppurating wounds. Few Indians seem to be bothered by such conditions. Most have become inured; others are in denial; some are aware,feel ashamed, enraged, and suffer without venting their feelings. "The city is not a concrete jungle, it is a human zoo." ----Desmond Morris ”The Jane Austen Book Club” by Karen Joy Fowler This is what I am reading now. Still on the library's waiting list for Elfriede Jelinek's "The Piano Teacher". Anouar Brahem Le pas du chat noir, ECM Records Anouar Brahem, oud Francois Couturier, piano Jean-Louis Matinier, accordion A few years ago MD (a friend of a friend) introduced me to Anouar Brahem's "Conte de l'incroyable amour". Brahem, a 47-year old Tunisian is creating wonderful music. He began as an oud (African version of lute) player and performed mostly for the Arab world. Over the years he has collaborated with well-known performers of jazz as well as Indian musicians. It is a pleasure to listen to Brahem and his accompanists. MD was doing doctoral work at Stanford when I met her. Now she is teaching at Swarthmore in Pennsylvania as part of a post-doctoral program.

December 17, 2004 · 4 min · musafir

Augusto Pinochet, A Monster for All Seasons

Perhaps partial "closure" at last for families of his victims To those of us who followed the rise and fall of General Pinochet, it is a good day…sort of. A Chilean judge ordered house arrest of General Pinochet on human rights charges. The Pinochet regime was accused of torturing some 28,000 people. An official report issued after the restoration of democracy in 1990 in Chile found 3,197 people had died or disappeared during the 17 years beginning in 1973 when General Pinochet assumed power after a bloody coup. Let us not forget that the United States,under the guidance of Dr. Henry Kissinger, aided and abetted the Chilean armed forces to topple the legitimately elected government of President Salvador Allende. Subsequently,the reign of terror----torture and killing of dissidents and those suspected of being dissidents----continued with full knowledge of our government. A shameful chapter in our history. "History is only the register of crimes and misfortunes." ----Voltaire

December 13, 2004 · 1 min · musafir

More on "Kinsey" and neurotic, puritanical Americans

"Plot against sex in America" is the title of an article by Frank Rich in today's NY Times. He says it much better than I did in my previous postings. Worth checking out the link below. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/12/arts/12rich.html The sex patrol is becoming more and more visible. Prudes on a crusade battling a demon that exists only in their sick minds. "The peculiarity of prudery is to multiply sentinels, in proportion as the fortress is less threatened" ----Victor Hugo (1802-1885)

December 10, 2004 · 1 min · musafir

The Motorcycle Diaries

A Great Movie Gael Garcia Bernal Rodrigo de la Serna Director: Walter Salles In Spanish with English Sub-Titles Gael Garcia Bernal and Rodrigo de la Serna Unless you get pleasure from watching high speed car chases, buildings being blown up, and people being killed, this is a film that you will enjoy. After the end of the movie JHL and I remained in our seats for a few minutes, reluctant to leave. The screen play was based on notes and diaries kept by Ernesto "Che" Guevara and his friend Alberto Granada during a trip across the South American continent in 1951-52. They began the journey on a 1939 Norton motor cycle. The motor cycle did not last long but they continued and finished their trip using any means of transportation that became available. Director Walter Salles did a superb job in bringing the story to screen. It was a treat to see the Mexican actor Gael Garcia Bernal as Che Guevara. Bernal has come a long way from his role as a college kid enamored with an older woman in "Y Tu Mama Tambien" (2001). Handsome, and can he act! Rodrigo de la Serna was perfect as the prankish, extrovert friend Alberto. Don't miss it. "No form of art goes beyond ordinary consciousness as film does, straight to our emotions, deep into the twilight of the soul." ----Ingrid Bergman

December 9, 2004 · 2 min · musafir

The Ghost of Alfred Kinsey and Osama bin Laden

Vying for a place in history An article in a recent issue of a well-known magazine mentioned that according to an organization of abstinence-education group called Why Know, the impact from publication of The Kinsey Report in 1948 was in a way equal to what the terrorists did on 9/11. Well, slay me with a dragon. Fast forward to a cave somewhere in South Asia. Aides busily preparing for a meeting. A tall, benign looking bearded man arrives and is greeted with bowed heads and murmured salutations: great leader, the wise one, mastermind of attacks against America,etc.,etc. The meeting comes to order. The tall, bearded man begins without preamble by slapping down a glossy magazine on the table and demanding to know who was Dr. Kinsey and how dare an organization in America claim that Dr. Kinsey caused as much damage as his carefully planned attacks on 9/11. He wanted a fatwa declared on the head of Kinsey. The aides had done their homework or thought they did. They tried to explain that the whole thing was blown grossly out of proportion and the great leader had nothing to worry. There was no one who came close to what he and his martyrs achieved on 9/11. Dr. Kinsey was no longer alive and the findings of his research about sexual habits and practices of American males appeared in print more than 50 years ago. The tall man with flowing beard was incredulous. He thundered “Are you trying to deceive me, you imbeciles? How could a book about sinful habits of the infidels be compared to my jihad? I observe fast and abstinence on holy days; keep myself pure, carry a weapon and am prepared to give my life for the cause of the all powerful. Get the facts,the real facts about this Kinsey and his book. Report back to me in a week. If you fail in your task then you can forget about the virgins in paradise. Instead, your punishment will be 10 lashes every day. I have spoken. Praise be to the almighty.” He walks away. The chief of staff was feverishly working the keys of his laptop. He announced that he had a strategy. He said that “We are going to do what the Brits did”. Everyone looked puzzled. He elaborated, “You know, they sexed up the dossier to justify the war in Iraq; we are going to prepare a sexed down dossier to convince our great leader that Dr. Kinsey was not successful in helping the Americans get rid of their sexual hang ups. Claims about the influence of his book were greatly exaggerated by a few puritanical ladies. Get to work. The first draft must be on my desk in 48 hours." The meeting concludes. Dr. Kinsey’s ghost shook its head and thought that if only the tall, bearded man had paid attention to his treatise he would have been a sexually fulfilled and happier person, and the same applied to members of the abstinence-education group. The world would have been so much better off. He sighed, turned around and went back to sleep. "Some things are better than sex, and some are worse, but there's nothing exactly like it." ----W. C. Fields (1880-1946)

December 8, 2004 · 3 min · musafir