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Friday 13 January 2006

Things I want to know

1. How does one get a music contemporaine gig in Paris playing anglophone text sound poetry which has enough musical meaning to work for non-anglophones? What about doing other contemporaine laptop music without words?

2. What are some good movies I can find in French with English subtitles? In the US, it's easy. You walk into any decent video store (ok, you walk into Reel in Berkeley) and head over to the French section. Everything is good. Everything is Version Originale. Everything has subtitles. Crappy moves don't get imported into the US. Reel would not stock something as gauche as Version Anglais. Everything has some kind of anglophone aid or component. If you think I would learn more French by having no idea what was going on, trying to follow idiom and slang with no cues from a subtitle, you'd be wrong.

There's many other things I want to know, but these are my main goals right now. Ranked by importance.

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Thursday 12 January 2006

Write a letter to the editor II

and they might publish it.

Editor -- Wednesday, Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr. refused to say that Roe vs. Wade was settled law and refused to disavow his writings in the 1980s, in which he said it should be overturned.

There can now be little doubt that Alito is an enemy of the rights of women. What was wrong with Harriet Miers again? Oh yeah, she looked a lot like a secretary ... I mean woman.

People keep track of such letters. Your voice counts, even if they don't publish it. Write a letter!

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Wednesday 11 January 2006

Write a letter to the editor

Alito refused to say that Row vs Wade was settled law. He's refused to disavow his writings (from the 1980s) in which he said it should be overturned. He used to belong to an alumni group whose purpose was to keep women and people of color out of his alma mater. He was so proud of this membership, he used to put it on job applications. Maybe he's mellowed out and maybe he hasn't, but he won't even say what Justice Roberts said.

Write your congress person! Also, write a letter to the editor! Yes, your congressperson's staffers check your name off a list and dutifully ignores you (write the email anyway). They also pay attention to letters in newspapers, which can also sway the newspapers themselves. So do both. How to write the SF Chronicle. They want 200 words or less. Say you oppose him and say why and that's it. You can send the same letter to your two senators and your local paper.

If you write the same letter to a bunch of newspapers, that's called astroturfing, which is considered dishonest and bad. And people at right wing think tanks are doing it right now to support Alito. Make sure to use an address local to the newspaper which you write.

Californians should note that Senator Dianne Feinstein is on the committee so make sure to drop her a line: http://feinstein.senate.gov/email.html

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Tuesday 10 January 2006

US Politics & International Media & Alito

Somebody remind me what was so wrong with Harriet Miers? Can she be the nominee again? TV5, the French media outlet, described Alito as ultra far right, which he is. The Washington Post is playing nice with him. And MSNBC had all right wing republicans on their panel discussion about the hearings. He's clearly going to be confirmed. Roe vs Wade is history. Also, I have a feeling I'm going to miss the right to practice sodomy.

Yeah, Miers might have sucked, cuz she had icky woman bits and might have wanted to keep Roe. Also, um, didja ever notice how she kinda looks like a woman? By which I mean a secretary?

Speaking of international media, French folks were all pissed off at the Americans for misreporting that Paris was burning to the ground during the riots of a while back. "They aren't even in Paris!" several complained. So when there was all that rain and whatnot a while ago in the Bay Area: "Oh my gosh, I saw on the [French TV] news that there's flooding in San Francisco" Not quite. This getting locations wrong thing goes both ways. However, I'm still inclined to agree with their characterization of Alito.

The comments sections have been rather empty fo late, so I'll give you a topic: Solresol: compositional tool, or crutch?

(so wtf is solresol? It's a conlang of course. wikipedia article, Official grammer (translated into english), itty english/ solresol/ french dictionary, the most official website these days, the yahoo group, the official gigantic (and poorly formatted) dictionary, but only in french . . . want to set a poem to music? You can just translate it to solresol and instant notes. Maybe they don't make any sense, but they're notes.)

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Monday 9 January 2006

Galette des rois

gallette des rois I went to the bakery yesterday and noticed that a bunch of weird flat cakes had appeared there in my absence. So I purchased one. It came in a special bag, which also included a paper crown. What on earth...? So apparently, this was a galette des rois, a crepe of the kings, which has to do with Epiphany. I found good descriptions of this phenomenon here and here

Epiphany, as you may recall is the day the three kings or wise men made it to see the infant Jesus and gave him gifts. It's also the official end of the Christmas season, according to the calendar of the Catholic church. The wise men told Joseph to get the heck out of Egypt or maybe an angel told him, I forget. Anyway, they took a sneaky route back to his home town while meanwhile, the bad King Herrod had all male children under 2 killed! Ack! Good thing it's all folklore.

Cola found the fève The French celebrate this by having these cakes with little toys hidden inside, called fèves. The uses to use fava beans, but not the use funny little figures. Cola found the fève, so she got to be crowned la reine. la reine et la galette The queen of Epiphany! Huzzah for Cola!

I'm charmed by the huge numbers of traditional foods that go with little fêtes and how these things are celebrated in small ways in daily life. It's super.

soycissesIn other food news, I tried buying fake meat again from the hippie store. Are these fake hotdogs or fake real sausage? I also got some vegetable pate and I have no idea what to do with that either. The other day, I accidentally bought rolled wheat instead of oatmeal. I never know what I'm getting or what to do with it. Every meal is a surprise.

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Sunday 8 January 2006

The Loire

Friday morning, I awoke at the crack of dawn (actually, before dawn, but it's pretty far north here) and got onto a slow train to Tours. It's 1 hour by TGV and much cheaper and 3 hours by the slower train. I arrived in Tours early in the afternoon and walked to the tourist office to get a hotel room. They highly recommended a hotel in the center of the town for 20€/ night. That's cheaper than the youth hostel! Oh, but it's closed. Why is it closed? Because nobody travels after new years. It's the lowest season of the year. We asked the tourist office folks about wine tasting. "Take the #61 bus to Vouvray" they told us. They don't run tours from Tours. Also, they warned, a lot of things will be closed for winter.

After getting our room in the one star hotel, we went to look at the Cathedral. It's really really really old. There were a series of stained glass windows from the 13th century describing the life of St Martin of Tours. He used to be the most important patron saint of France. He converted pagans, lived as a hermit and as a bishop, all that good early christian stuff. After wandering around the inside of the cathedral, we went to look at the cloister. One must purchase tickets, but it's free to students. "Are you a student?" the ticket seller asked. "I am, but she's not." I replied. "Oh, what do you study? History? The Loire valley? This region?" errr "music." Her enthusiasm subsided. The cloister was cool, though.

Then, walked along the Loire. It was a bit chilly. (brrrrrrr) We crossed the Pont de Fils to the north side and walked along the river a bit. Descartes used to stroll along the river, but as it's become less important for trade, the town doesn't pay much attention to it anymore. It didn't look navigable. There's a point where it's possible to see ruins of a medieval bridge into the city, but, the placard explained, only when the water is really low. We saw the ruins, so maybe that's why it looked like you couldn't boat up the river.

Then we looked at the remains of the castle at Tours. It had two towers (in french: tours) left standing and that was about it. Still, cool looking.

We went back to our hotel room so that Cola could borrow some of my thermal underwear. All the Parisians I talked to before leaving kept saying "It's going to be SOOOOO cold" So I packed three pairs of long johns and a bunch of sweaters. Cola thought they were exagerating (they were) and packed some light sweaters and springtime wear. Alas! So she put on some of my warmer stuff and I pondered what makes a hotel only receive one star. Maybe it was that the room was kind of cold? Was it the peeling paint on the ceiling? Naw, that's not so bad. The room's not even that small. Oh, it's because the people walking around above us are shaking the chandelier! They sound like sounded elephants! Anyway, if this is the standard fron 1 star, then go for it!

The next day, we went to look at the medieval section of the city. Oh my god, it was cold walking down the empty narrow streets. There were pictures on the walls of the closed cafes, showing how it's bustling and exciting in summer. Nothing was open. We went to the bascillica of St Martin. In the crypt, there was a chapel where mass had just let out. Every catholic church must have a first class relic (an actual piece of a dead person who is a saint) in the altar. This chapel just went ahead and used a coffin for an altar. Weird weird weird. It was kind of a cheerful crypt though, and a lot warmer than anyplace else I'd been that morning. The bascillica was built I think in the 19th century. It's too bad the older one got knocked down. The new one is not very exciting except for the weirdness of the religion.

Then we got on the #61 bus to Vouvray. It's about 10 km away from Tours. On the way, we passed oodles of Troglodyte dwellings including a troglodyte hotel! (Some of you are clicking away to a dictionary. Others of you (like me) learned this word when you watched the movie Delicatessen (a fine film!). "Troglodyte" mean 'cave dweller' with connotations of being prehistoric. However, some of these caves were obviously inhabited. Chimneys, emerged from grassy hills and belched smoke!

We got to Vouvray and it looked like the town was deserted. We went to the tourist office and they gave us a map and a list of wineries. Wine cellars are called "caves" in French. All of the wine places in Vouvray are called "caves", which is entirely appropriate. We got lunch at a mostly empty braserie and then started walking towards the castle and caves. The castle was closed. Winter? Lunch? Saturday? Who knows. We kept walking towards the wineries and passed a bunch of cave dwellings. I want to go inside of one of them! Some looked cozy. Some looked like the residents had moved to free standing houses and now used their caves as garages. Some looked just like hobbit holes, except the satalite dishes attached to the chimneys. We kept walking, probably half way back to tours and nothing was open. Some places said "open" but weren't. One place said it was open and a guy came out, but when I said something about wine tasting (in my broken terrible french) he told me I had the wrong address. (Oh, that's why there's a giant sign that says WINE TASTING in your DRIVEWAY! Because this is the WRONG ADDRESS!, I did not say in a snarky, sarcastic tone.)

Finally, I walked into the driveway of a place that said it was open and alarm went off. I waited for a moment, wondering what to do when a woman appeared and lead Cola and I into a cave. A real cave! It had a chimney carved into to. There was a carving in the chimney which was dated 1944. The room was darkish (outside was darkish too, to be fair, it was a grey, cloudy day) and rounded on top. It was white, maybe painted, but I think the stones were just a whitish color. There were itty hols in the walls that it looked like water leaked out of. There was moss growing spots. Other stuff growing in other spots. It didn't look cozy and hobbit like from the inside, but this was just a cave de vins and not a living room. "What kind of wine do you want to try?" The woman asked. I dunno, what have you got? I don't know a darn thing about wines from Vouvray. "Are they all white?" I asked, showing my ignorance. Yes. White and something in fast french. uhhh. From this brief exchange I can tell you that Vouvray wines are white and I suspect they specialize in sparkling wine. However, I didn't try the sparking wine. I tried the still wine. She looked at me patiently, while I sipped the dry white wine. She spoke only a smidgen of English. I was having a bad French day (maybe it was the accent). Her whole demeanor conveyed a certain forced patience. I bought a bottle of semi-sweet white and left. "No more wine tasting" I whispered to Cola.

We kept walking up the cold gray street, occasionally, diving for cover as a car careened past at high speed, until we got to the grape fields. We took a walk through one of them, looking at the vines, died back for winter. Crows flew overhead and the dark sky brooded. A dead, twisted tree stood darkly in the distance, at the top of the hill. The icy wind blew. "This kind of sucks" I said. We walked back down towards the village. And saw the first sign of life (aside from speeding cars). A grey haired woman on a bicycle came peddaling up the street. She shouted greetings at her family member, who stood near the entrance of their cave. It had lace curtains in the windows. On the back of her bike was a basket, filled with some groceries and several baguette. here was the heart of France! The deep Frenchness! This woman back from the bakery, ready to do some gardening outside of her cozy cave!

We caught the bus back to Tours and then wandered for a long time, searching in vain for vegetarian food. Half the restaurants were closed and the ones that served vegetarian french fare were all filled up (dear restaurant owners: please note that YOUR restaurant could also be filled up if you served vegetarian food). We got back to the hotel room. "Tomorrow is sunday. Is there going to be ANYTHING open in Chinon?" Cola looked at the guide book. "Um, the castle." But it's all ruins except for like three rooms. And the town is supposed to be cute. The michillean guide, however, advocated spending three hours in Chinon. In the summer. When everything is open. We discussed coming back early. We woke up the next morning (which was this morning) and it was raining, so we walked to the train station and got the next slow train back to Paris.

Yeah, I've never really travelled in the "off-season" before. It's off, though. If you want to go in the winter, you need to go during a festival or other special event or season when things are going to be open. As it happens, the fête of the patron saint of vineyards is on the 22nd in Vouvray. A bunch of stuff will be going on. Contact the tourist office by the 17th to reserve your place. It's not far from Paris by train.

It is way better to go wine tasting in a tour group because somebody will explain to you what's what and what kind of wine to expect and how it's mad and all sorts of stuff. The vinter will give a little speech. People will be expecting you. You will learn something about the region's wines. Bordeaux does tours like that year round, but Tours doesn't, alas. I'm planning on coming back in the summer as a part of my planned summer bike trip, so I'll get another chance to try the wine and see Chinon,

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Musée d'Orsay

Before I talk about the Loire, I want to talk about what I did on Thursday: The Musée d'Orsay. This museum specializes in the 19th century. Specifically, the guy who wrote Paris to the Moon alleges, academic art from the 19th century. There is a plan where one can see this museum without gnawing their own arm off to escape:

At one end of the museum there's a series of escalators and a sign that says direct access to the impressionists. Go up that escalator!! The good stuff is all the tippy top of the museum. Go up to the top and work your way down. When you feel like you can't stand it anymore, then leave. You've already seen the best stuff and it just gets worse from there on (although do try to see the Rodin on your way out).

Ah, the 19th century! The century of genius! The century of (white) man's domination over nature (and other people)! The century of huge paintings of battles! The century of a bunch of really ghastly art starting outside the museum and spreading to the first couple of floors. Outside, while standing in line, look behind you. See the statue of the elephant? See how it's foot is caught in a snare? See how a much smaller predator is going to bite it and eat it before it even dies? Ok, now look to your right. See the statue of the horse? She how it's falling onto the anti-horse battlefield weapon? See how alarmed the horse looks? Ok, now look between. See the rhino? Something bad is about to happen to that rhino. We don't know what will happen. Maybe it will fall on the prickly pear somehow. Maybe somebody is lurking, waiting to kill it. Maybe a snare has not yet been sprung. But really, only disaster could possibly await that rhino. Now it's your turn to enter the museum!

Anyway, why would you put all the crap right in the part most easily accessible and then hide the good stuff so far away? This is why I did not go into any museums this last weekend.

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Commission Music

Commission Music
Bespoke Noise!!