Friday, June 26, 2020

This Just In , , ,


I was bored, and I went searching for news in the world's media.

“Australia gets second wave of toilet paper hoarding as coronavirus cases spike.”  Straitstimes (Singapore), June 25, 2020.

“Antarctic penguins are 'happier with less sea ice', scientists find.”  Sky News (United Kingdom), June 25, 2020.

“US politics:  'Please for the love of God do not vote for my dad': Republican's daughter voices opposition.”  The Guardian (United Kingdom), June 26, 2020.

“Sign up for St Petersburg News, a daily newsletter full of things to discuss over drinks and the great thing is that it's on the house!”  St Petersburg (Russia) News, June 26, 2020.

“Coronavirus: US hits record high in daily cases”. . . “Pence hails US 'progress' despite new surge.”  bbc.com/news (June 26, 2020).  

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Monday, June 15, 2020

The "Radetzky March": Who, or What, Was a Radetzky? And Why a “Radetzky March”?

While cruising around the internet I came across a link for “Radetzky March…Chinese Version.” 

Well, the Radetzky March is a popular concert piece, but what’s so special about a Chinese version?  And, most important, why is there a “Radetzky March” at all?  Did anyone actually march to this piece, or was it strictly a concert selection?  And what is it with the hand clapping?

Johann Joseph Wenzel Anton Franz Karl, Graf Radetzky von Radetz was born November 2, 1766, in Trebnice, Bohemia (now in the Czech Republic) and died January 5, 1858, in Milan, Italy.  Joseph, Graf Radetzky, as his name is often shortened to, lived at a time when European rulers were preoccupied with making war, which was something he was good at.  He joined the Austrian army in 1784, became one of the army’s most fearless and effective field commanders, was idolized by his troops, and ended his career as a national hero.

Johann Strauss Sr. wrote the “Radetzky March” to honor the Austrian hero.  Strauss the father—not to be confused with his son who became known as the Waltz King—was a popular composer who turned out works in several forms—waltz, galop, polka, march.  To honor a military hero he chose the military form, the march.

The work debuted in 1848.  At the first performance, attending Austrian officers caught up in a patriotic fervor stomped their feet and clapped their hands.  Since then, audiences have  clapped along with the rhythm of the piece.

Heard here is a traditional performance,this one in Vienna, staged during every New Year's celebration and televised to viewers in more than 70 countries worldwide.

This is the Chinese performance  mentioned earlier in this post.  The conductor is Chen Xieyang, here leading the China National Traditional Orchestra at the Wiener Musikverein (Vienna Concert Hall) performing a Chinese New Year concert in 1998.

Besides being a concert piece the "Radetsky March" is also marched to.  I went looking for a marching video to fit in here and came up empty handed. 

Then I got sidetracked into watching and listening to the "Pizzicato Polka," by Johann Strauss Jr. and Josef Strauss.  It's performed by the same Chinese orchestra that played the "Radetzky March" above.  Not only is the polka well-played, but I like to watch the conductor pluck notes out of the air around him.

That's enough culture for today.  Thanks for stopping by.   

(A biography in the online Britannica is my source for the few words about Radetsky written here. Key words in the text can be searched to find additional sources.)

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Monday, June 8, 2020

I Have This Window; Part 2--They're Gone


The crowds have dispersed.  Several weeks ago, the scene outside my window was one of people, people, people.  They couldn’t go to work because doing so might spread the coronavirus, so they stayed home and went out for walks.  

During that period I could see that I actually had neighbors, that those houses up and down the street weren’t just arrangements of lumber but wooden boxes in which real, live people resided.

But this is California.  We expect perfection in the weather.  Cloudless skies and seventy-five- degree temperatures are just fine.  But rain brings on the fear that like metal we might rust, or like sugar we could just melt away.  And heat drives us indoors where we can inhale deeply from the air conditioning outlets, like an asthmatic getting a fix from an inhaler. 

And this is what happened.  A couple days of drizzle flushed the streets of dust, dogs, and people.  The return of mild weather didn’t last long and was followed by temperatures above the century mark.  Then a few days of cooling came, then heat again.

Now most everyone seems to be inside.  Or maybe they’re back at work.  One never knows about these things. 


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