Sunday, 14 June 2020

On Becoming a Hermit, Sort of ... Week 13

Week Commencing Monday 8th June 2020

It seems that this is a week in which we conclude the end of three months in Coronavirus Lockdown. We started to ease our way into our own lockdown in the week commencing 17th March, the day it was officially announced, although it didn't officially start until the following weekend. 

As weeks go, so far, this has been as normal as can be. B has been continuing the manufacture of face masks for the local care community, albeit under some stress early in the week. This was mainly caused by having spent the whole weekend making masks for family, not helped by the fact that the sewing machine apparently broke down - that turned out to be operator error, which she confessed ruefully! Nonetheless, she should have and indeed had always intended to take the weekends off and do something different. So her spirit was, shall we say, not in the most refreshed state. However, a good walk with the dogs on Tuesday afternoon, did refresh the spirit as it ever does, and on we go.

Tuesday evenings session with Hallmark was the first of a new schedule of activities for us, in the form of a musical education session with now Vice Chair of the British Association of Barbershop Singers (BABS), Alan Hughes. By way of background, Alan is member of the 2008 British Champion quartet, Monkey Magicthree of whom sing with Hallmark, and, famously a member of the Great British Barbershop Boys (the same four singers), who won a recording contract with Sony a couple of years later (look up their famous "Evolution of Song" on YouTube). Anyway, he did a good job of explaining some basics of understanding musical notation and, in particular, some of the unique aspects of barbershop music.

Zoom still punctuates our week: Tuesday mornings, the Wentworth Castle Archive team meets, Tuesday evening Hallmark of Harmony, Wednesday mornings Tai Chi, Thursday mornings usually Guide Dogs Puppy Class, Thursday evenings Fox Valley Voices and Saturday mornings Family. It's a full life being stuck at home. It's a human trait to be busy and, hopefully, constructive.

It seems this week that the press has been full of #BLM, Black Lives Matter, because of an awful event, the full video of which has gone viral. This was the killing of George Floyd, a black American stopped and restrained in the street by four US police officers, one of whom kneeled with his full weight on the neck of the victim for a full nine minutes. The consequence of this was that Floyd became increasingly distressed and eventually died. The callous attitude of all four police officers and their indifference to the plight of their 'prisoner' was plain for all to see. An injustice that keeps repeating itself all over the USA, but not often caught in full view of the light of day, the digital technology and social media that exposed the tragedy to the World. Had this not happened, those police officers would probably have got away with it. As it is, there in deep doodoos! 

On a more pleasant note, music for the week is, as usual, from Clemency Burton-Hill's "Year of Wonder".

Monday: "Abendlied" - Evening Song by Robert Schumann (1810-1856). At first sight, I thought this song was the song, of the same name, that is on the current repertoire of Fox Valley Voices, my chamber choir. It was one I and we love. Even B likes this one, which we even performed at our Carol Supper last December. However, the one we sing is by Josef Rheinberger (1839-1901). This is a slow, melancholy instrumental piece for piano. One can imagine Robert himself or even Clara Schumann, who was allegedly a better pianist than he was, giving this its bucket full of passion. Today is Robert Schumann's birthday.

Tuesday: Sinfonia concertante for violin and viola in E flat major, K. 364 1: Allegro maestoso by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791). 

Wednesday: Isolde's Liebestod - Love-Death from Tristan and Isolde by Richard Wagner (1813-1883). Premiered on this very day in 1865. Clemency writes a stinging critique of Wagner fans, who are obsessed with the whole Wagner aura, that you haven't a chance to become a member of the 'club' until you've seen every production at Bayreuth (Wagner's own opera house) ... tiresome. To say nothing of the 'Tristan chord' a harmonic ambiguity with which Wagner is said to have changed the entire course of Western music in just four notes! Whatever your views, I'll leave you to enjoy it.

Thursday: "Morgen! - Tomorrow", Op. 27 No.4 by Richard Strauss (1864-1949). He was born on this day and at the age of thirty he wrote this as one of four songs for his wife on their wedding day. Set to the words of his contemporary, John Henry Mackay, in 1894, it is poetic to say the least ...


And tomorrow the sun will shine again,
and on the path I will take,
it will unite us again, we happy ones,
upon this sun-breathing earth ...

Here sung by the delightful voice of Joyce DiDonato

Friday: "Mi Teresita (Little Waltz) by Teresa Carreno (1853-1917). She led what seems to be a turbulent life with three or four partners, several children by at least three of them. This piece was composed for her daughter, Teresita, who like her mother, herself became a famous pianist. 


However you may be affected by anything I've written here, do let me know by leaving a comment below or, if you prefer not to, share your thoughts with a trusted friend or someone you love. 

Sunday, 7 June 2020

On Becoming a Hermit, Sort of ... Week 12

Week Commencing Monday, 1st June 2020

Fresh supply of Fruit and Veg delivered by Grace's Farm

Courtesy Grace's Farm Shop
Shop today. Always good to have a full fruit bowl and fresh veg. I've made the 'F' and 'V' capitals because of their importance, of course. We are lucky to be able to continue buying good quality produce. Long may it last.

Tai Chi continues to improve our minds and bodies and we're now moving on to 'Parting the Wild Horse's Mane' and even 'Jade Girl Works at the Shuttle' and looking to our teacher to help us move one from here. Yes, I know you've been dying to have this information. Now you are the first to know! 

I washed the car on Sunday. Must be the first time for ... this year! The things one does in Lockdown! Was thinking about waxing it, but then it rained ... on to the next job.

We've been receiving quotes from competing contractors for a battery to store our solar energy production as well as an air source heat pump. We are now beginning to feel that the latter is a non-starter under current and foreseeable circumstances, primarily because it requires access by installers to all areas of our home. 

Wild 'Dog' Rose along the Steel Valley Walk
It seems that the UK, particularly England, is fast becoming known as the epicentre of the pandemic in Europe. Unsurprising, considering the statistics. Deaths have now exceeded 40,000 and the number of confirmed cases over 280,000. On the other hand, the battery will happily be installed in one location and not require access by installers to anywhere else in the house. So the risk is containable. 

I am now convinced the installation of a battery offers so many benefits, not least being able to utilise power more efficiently, for example charging from the solar panels during the day and charging from the grid at cheaper rates at night or even being paid to take excess electricity from the grid during windy nights! So it’s a no-brainer for me. 
Probably Another Wild Rose

B has recently joined a local, well, regional volunteer group that is making face masks for the care community around the county.
Last week she got up to speed with the specific design, that has pleats, a wired nose piece and a pocket to insert an extra filter. Testing the specific dimensions on me pulled my ears forward and made me look like the BFG! Some adjustment was therefore required for bigheads. This week she has consistently made four masks a day. She is restricting herself to that number so that she has time to carry out her several other regular tasks, which Mask orders from family. Nonetheless, she has made twenty masks in her first full production week. Well done, missus. 

Steel Valley Walk
Walked a little bit of the Steel Valley Walk with Taz on Friday on the way back from picking up some more hen food and my ‘scrip from the chemist. Pictures of what I saw on this brief excursion are above.

We’ve had some welcome rain for the past two or three days. Temperatures have dropped significantly, from the late teens and early twenties for the past week or so, down to barely ten degrees. 

New longer term plans for Hallmark of Harmony emerged on Tuesday this week. Adding structure and form to a cycle of routines, which will include one 'social' a month and one musical 'education' session. Benefits could accrue to this lockdown life that might not have been realised otherwise. It's making us all review our priorities and also how we can do things. The latest new song is the Crossroads arrangement of "You Don't, You Won't". It's a brute of a song with a beast of a bass line (and probably beastly baritone, lead and tenor lines too), but we are up for it ... and how! 

In the mean time, as B continues making face masks for our son and his family, I took both dogs out for walks today, in dubious weather, teaming with rain at one stage, but then nobody can call me a fair weather walker.

See you next week.

Here's some music from Clemency Burton-Hill's "Year of Wonder" ...

Monday: "Je Te Veux" by Erik Satie (1866-1925) and the occasion of my and my wife's forty-sixth wedding anniversary. I could probably have selected  something else, but it is very pleasant nonetheless and, according to Clemency, the ultimate cabaret song.

Tuesday: Divertimento on Sellinger's Round 2: 'A Lament' : Andante espressivo by Michael Tippett (1905-1998). The whole works, of which this is the second movement, is a collaboration between several composers including Tippett, Britten and Walton. The occasion was the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II on this day (2nd June) in 1953.

Wednesday: Ave Maria by Charles Gounod (1818-1893) after J. S. Bach (1685-1750).

Thursday: Overture from Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka (1804-1857). 

Friday: Ribers No.8 Traditional Danish, arr. Danish String Quartet. This is a string quartet whose roots are in classical music of Haydn, Schubert and Mozart, which they take very seriously, but this leaning to the traditions of folk music shows how grounded they are and not narrow minded about their primary genre. "This piece" argues Burton-Hill,"speaks honestly to who they are as musicians and the rich tradition from which they come as anything else they might care to play". 

Saturday: Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia from Spartacus by Adam Khachaturian (1903-1978). Khachaturian, born on this day (6th June) in 1903, was know as the Rubens of Russian music, because of what Clemency Burton-Hill calls his 'painterly' music. Listening to this famous composition exemplifies that for me, without any doubt. This composition was part of the revival of his fortunes after Stalin, in whose time Khachaturian was out of favour, had died in 1953. It was massively popular.

Sunday: Raga Piloo Traditional Indian Version by Ravi Shankar (1920-2012) and Yehudi Menuhin (1916-1999). I seem to recall that Yehudi Menuhin collaborated with many musicians across different genre, amongst the better known of whom was jazz violinist, Stephane Grappelli. Famously Menuhin commissioned a composition by Alan Hovhaness, for violin and sitar with full Western symphony orchestral accompaniment. This was titled 'Shambala'. Sadly it was never recorded by them, but there is much to admire in this piece, played by them both.

However you may be affected by anything I've written here, do let me know by leaving a comment below or, if you prefer not to, share your thoughts with a trusted friend or someone you love.