PUTNEY VCS |
SYNTRX (ERICA INSTRUMENTS) |
Who is Phaedrus? He explores interior frontiers where we meet to discover possibilities of ourselves... He is in the shadows, in the sounds, in the strains of music filtering through, in the past and somewhere in a distant time to be...
PUTNEY VCS |
SYNTRX (ERICA INSTRUMENTS) |
There was tremendous negative energy in the air a few days ago. It started peaking on Thursday, March 12... it was independent of CRV-19, but fear of the virus contributed to heightened anxiety... anger and fear. I had experienced a fantastic positive day on Wednesday.. which had followed Dr. Lisa Naugle of UCI departing after a two-day intensive that we could only describe as research... Researching Lived Experience.
One primary object of research was the new multimedia production of West Side Story. The production was using media to construct the dramatic environment, using still images, prepared video, and live video. These were techniques we had experimented in our international workshop IMPACT for ten years.
Also in that context, under IMPACT PRESENTS, three of my theatre pieces utilized these techniques: IF TIME REMEMBERS (2014), ROTATION (2015), and IF THIS BE MADNESS (2016).
The works mentioned are works remounted from the past with new material added and production techniques using extended media and process. My research with Lisa those few days in March hasn't produced any mutual collaboration, inspires and informs my work going forward.
But the energy behind this quest came from my first mentor, Gene Hemmle, who was the founder of the Music School at Texas Tech, whom we all knew affectionately as "Doc." He had a brilliant career in New York City as a dancer and singer on Broadway, and as a founding member of the Robert Shaw Chorale. He was invited by this emerging new University, Texas Tech to come to create a music department that quickly grew into a school. Although I had my eyes on Julliard, Doc convinced me to give Texas Tech a try. As a promotion, he had used the students of his new department to stage a stunning musical revue that toured Texas as a vehicle to recreate new students. It was like a Broadway production.Madrid is more than magical. It is designed around squares such as Santa Anna and Sol. They have identified Absolute Zero, the center of Spain, and the point where all roads in Spain converge. One can feel the sense of geometry when walking the narrow, cobblestone streets that honor the past while hosting pedestrians strolling in search of adventure. Being there in December, there were grey days and marvelous sunny days. I was to surprise there was a Madrid Broadway with shows such as the LION KING and WEST SIDE STORY are long running hits. I would have liked more time to explore.I believe on SOL Square, APPLE has acquired a classic, venerable building to host Madridians... it was chic in this setting, and walking in, I might have been in APPLE SOHO except the chatter was all Spanish. Spanish is spoken in a kind of staccato, crisp and somewhat anguished or hurried... or maybe “intense” is a better description. At night, flames from warmers at outdoor cafes and counters cast a warm and cozy glow in the squares and along the streets...romantic and practical.Nothing will deter Madridians from the night. Its citizens live for the night with such abundant social and artistic pursuits that you can feel the shift in energy the moment the sun disappears.There were so many European style cafes and bars that beckoned for your presence to hang out... maybe write a poem or use the setting to begin a story. I felt Madrid was a city for poets, writers, and musicians.I lingered in the streets which were decorated with the most elegant graffiti.... sensitive and provocative... sensual textures applied to wood and stone... creatures born of the night of the imagination and etched into the soul of the city.Madrid calls itself MAD. Indeed, this madness stems from the night, and for me madness is the essence of each new adventure. At night in Madrid you can feel everyone reaching out to each other looking for something to validate their true existence. Laughter and animated conversations tattoo the Squares and streets with such a vibrant polyphonic tapestry that I find myself adding my own contrapuntal improvisations... that’s it! ...it is a city to improvise the destinies of future moments... a place to notice who you are, and to divert directions to paths not yet travelled.
In the Spring in early 2000s, Sandro Dernini (center) launched his new book inviting colleagues and Plexus with a special intro by Dr. David Ecker, (3rd from left in back) |
Dinu shepherding us through Italy, pictured with Lisa Naugle and John Crawford. |
When you set out for IthakaIt always struck me as curious that the poem is entitled ITHACA, but in his text Cavafy always uses Ithaka, perhaps idealizing our mutual destiny that may be conditional to being human, while remaining totally personal and unique. But for the poet, the destination is more a process than a location. If you ever find your Ithaka, you may discover that the joy was in the journey and not the destination.
ask that your way be long,
full of adventure, full of instruction...
Have Ithaka always in your mind.
Your arrival there is what you are destined for.
But don't in the least hurry the journey.
Better it last for years,
so that when you reach the island you are old,
rich with all you have gained on the way...
This poem came from what seems to be emerging as a series of Not-This-Far themes. It's no secret that I am continually surprised to find I'm still here. As I entered my fourth decade, I thought maybe I had overstayed my tenure. Now as I enter the eighth decade, I understand there are different expectations.Not this far. . .
I never knew I would survive
Beyond a barrier
Self conceived and self imposed
So long ago
That empty pages found a way
To mock my delusion,
Imitating the nothingness
Of anticipated emptiness.
Now these words . . .
I never knew I could revive
An unknown continent
Remembered, yet emerging
So far away
That silent chambers now resound
To shape a new perception,
Celebrating the resonance . . .
Restoring such abundant songs!
Before me stands my soul. Behind me limpsNow, more than 60 years have passed, and still the journey calls me, perpetual sirens on the shore beguiling me, perhaps distracting me. "What took you so long?" they seem to say. I must admit that maybe I was sidetracked. Maybe there was meant to be a different destiny.
The shadow of myself, which claims my mind
And lives in fear that I'll pursue the glimpse
Of permanence once seen when I was blind
To all but thought. Eternity demands
The infinite eye of mind to see much more
Than moments. I shall touch my soul with hands
Of art, and leave my shadow to explore
The vain imagination of its own
Identity in darkness. I must go
Upon a road where I must go alone...
Pursuing the path only my soul can know.
Shadows mocking me on silent feet
Become the only obstacles I meet.
You go to my head with a smileIt had been the end of summer and a new season of my life.
That makes my temperature rise
Like a summer with a thousand Julys
You intoxicate my soul with your eyes
Still I say to myselfSongwriters Haven Gillespie and Fred Coots expressed for me the magic of that summer of 2017. It was a summer that intoxicated me like a thousand Julys and brought a miracle to NYC.
Get ahold of yourself
Can't you see that it never can be
How many renaissances . . .Yet, what is emerging is not like the past... the days of opportunity are not dissolving. The inward possibilities are bubbling up from the depths and taking shape. "What might be" is evolving into a vivid presence. But none of this would be happening had it not been for an encounter with an unexpected stranger.
How many times
Will the silence invite me
To the feast?
I toast to festivals of years. . .
Here's to the painful isolation,
Here's to the innocence
Now lost. . .
Here's to the quiet wonder
Here's to the mystery of awe
To chaos on the edge of order . . .
Too soon
The days of opportunity dissolve,
The inward possibilities remain inert,
And all that might be and might have been
Is gone.
First, the language of haiku, ...is based on colloquialism, and in my opinion, the closest approximation of natural conversational rhythm can be achieved in English by a four-line stanza rather than a constrained three-line stanza.Bashō took his name from the tree of that name after one of his disciples presented him with a stock of a Bashō tree. A Bashō is a species of banana tree. Bashō remarked "I love the tree for its very uselessness."
What is important is to keep our mind high in the world of true understanding, and returning to the world of our daily experience to seek therein the truth of beauty. No matter what we may be doing at a given moment, we must not forget that it has a bearing upon our everlasting self which is poetry.In The Narrow Road to the Deep North, Bashō undertakes a journey to what is regarded as the unknown forces of the universe in order to be the poetry that makes the world profoundly eloquent. Having composed a song this summer, "If This Be Madness", I wrote:
If this be madness,What a revelation it was to come upon this poem by Bashō:
It sets me free,
From all the sadness
That once was me.
But is it madness
To look with love
Beyond the limits
That we’re made of?
We each have madness
Somewhere inside…
A touch of genius
From which we hide
Perhaps its madness
Or just naive
To want to live my life
As I believe…
And even now I hear
A distant song
I know it’s somewhere near
Where I belong
And even now I see
That I must go
There’s a different me
And there are worlds
I’ve yet to know!
With a bit of madness in me,And so I seem to have come full circle as I continue my journey of 81 years, remembering that as a child, the essence of the world was its poetic presence.
Which is poetry...