Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘musings’

I once served my father mulberries on a little pink plastic plate.  The mulberry tree stood in the yard of a neighbor down the street.  Most people rued the tree’s existence as birds ate the berries and then proceeded to stain laundry hung outside to dry.   I do not remember why on that summer’s day I wanted to pick berries but I did and I guess I became quite vocal.   In any case, one of my older brothers took me by the hand and walked me down the street.  He helped me pick the berries from the ground.  Upon returning home, I rinsed them in the kitchen sink and then carefully piled them on a saucer.  My parents happened to have company over that day.  Most of the adults sat outside beneath the shade of our plum tree.  To each of them I offered my plate of sparkling fruit.  I wanted someone to partake.  All said no except my father.  He looked me in the eyes and smiled.  Then, he took the plate and the fork I offered.  He smashed the berries just a little and then scooped them into his mouth.

Maybe eight years later when I was fourteen or so, I sat at the kitchen table.  Across from me, my father read the local newspaper while sipping his instant coffee.  I leafed through the Sears catalog.  My mother called it a dream book.  When especially young, my younger brother and I would sit side by side on the couch with the catalog draped over our legs.  We would spin tales, pretending that we were drinking from the crystal goblets or playing with the toys and tools.  But as time passed, and I began to attend school with kids from a very different socio-economic bracket, leafing through the catalog became less fun.  It was a reminder of what I did not have.   That day as my father and I sat in the kitchen, I flipped slowly through the catalog pages staring at young women dressed in clothes I wanted.  At some point, I looked up.  My father watched me.  I will never forget the look on his face, the sadness.  “I’m sorry I can’t get you those clothes.”   I closed the book and said with a big smile, “I don’t need them.  I was just daydreaming.”  He shook his head, then smiled a bit tentatively and went back to his paper.

At his funeral many years later, a gentleman called my father “stick in the mud.”  It was a complement.  He was viewed by just about all who knew him as steady and as an anchor in my mother’s life.  The concept of family as anchor and inspiration in one’s life  has been on my mind a great deal lately.  For many reasons but most especially because of a statement made by my younger brother.  For as long as they could, our parents raised us like twins.  Today we still chat quite a bit even though we now live thousands of miles apart.  He is in a new phase of life, juggling a lot, raising his growing family, helping out other family and friends, while working overtime to make ends meet.  After putting out several recent fires and taking a break to simply breathe, he said to me, “When I die, I don’t know if I will ever see our mom and dad again.  If I do, the first words I will say to them, especially to Pop, are Thank you.  I’m just learning how much he juggled, how much he sacrificed.  We just never knew …”

Don’t get me wrong.  My father was no saint nor was he a perfect father.  He was simply a good man who believed in taking care of his family. He was no teacher but he sure taught by example.  He did not speak often but he could spin a tale.  My brothers have inherited his straight forward eloquence.  I am less eloquent but I do love finding the story in words and in images.   I don’t know what he would think of my photography, especially the more abstract images like these branches.  But I do know that he would look earnestly at my work, then gaze into my eyes and he would smile.  And should he see my younger brother one more time?  My brother will say thank you and then I am sure our father will gaze into his eyes and he will say, “Son, you are welcome.”

Read Full Post »

I found this moth on my kitchen table.  I have to admit, thanks to Steve, I see moths just a little bit differently than I did before he and I met.  Because he and I are of different generations, he often introduces me to art and music that I am quite sure I would not chance upon without him.  Most recently he introduced Archy, a philosophical cockroach who used to be a poet in a previous life, and Mehitabel, a wise-talking alley cat who believes she is Cleopatra reincarnated.  Created in 1916 by Don Marquis in his daily column for the New York Evening Sun, the pair share adventures expressed in light verse.  One of Steve’s favorites:  the lesson of the moth. In time, the shorts were compiled into books, and a musical was recorded with Carol Channing voicing Mehitabel.

Steve tracked down a CD containing the original music production.  We listened last night.  It was a treat to hear the actors bringing such unique characters to life.  Now, also found on this CD is the Carnival of Animals, an instrumental work paired with words by Ogden Nash.  When the Carnival music started, it was beautiful … and it was strangely familiar.  I asked Steve who confirmed, “It’s a classic by Saint-Saens.  I first heard it as a child, when my father played it in the 50’s.”  “Hmmm,” I replied.  “I think I first heard it on Bugs Bunny.”  Steve shrugged.  “That’s where you first heard Wagner, isn’t it?”  Well, too true.  Meanwhile …

* You can hear the complete version of the Saint-Saens Carnival of Animals suite via this link.

* Read more about and by Archy & Mehatibel here.

* FYI, Carnival of Animals was featured in a Bug Bunny production which you can read more about at the bottom of this wiki page.  And to learn more about Bugs Bunny as classical music teacher, check out this wonderful page called Bugs Bunny Goes Classical.

 

 

 

Read Full Post »

Reading photographer Jay Kinghorn’s post about how audio affects perception of visual images reminded me of the “soundtracks” I used to create as I wrote short stories.  The music I collected helped me channel, get lost in, build and sustain emotions that I needed to create strong images on the page.  With the support of a tech savvy roommate, I even played around with Windows Media and tried to weave together my written words with still images and compiled music.  The goal?  Simply to tell a story and use accompanying music to create emotional resonance.  Currently I do little with short stories or movie making though music still influences my work … I sometimes listen to music as I walk along the Charles with my camera.  Perhaps this New England winter, I will jump back into the fiction.  Meanwhile, this late summer morning, I find myself pondering the fact that while audio certainly affects image perception, the flipside is also true.  Visuals influence our perception of audio.

Leaf by the Charles River

Yes, there is some connection to recent Sunday musings where I lamented that, in today’s politics, glossy images distract from listening to candidates’ words.  Nothing novel there – just look at the 1960 Kennedy/Nixon debate where television viewers apparently thought the inexperienced yet highly telegenic Kennedy won the debate while radio listeners thought the less telegenic, more experienced Nixon won.  Politics aside, consider pharmaceutical ads especially the ones that air during the evening news and other programs associated with older viewers.  The companies have to share the side effects associated with the drug being advertised.  Notice how the spoken words (e.g. … this drug may cause this that or the other thing and in rare cases lead to death …)  are paired with images of happy people of all ages meandering — sometimes slowly but always with a smile — along beaches, up mountains, through open-air markets, with a dog or two in tow.  Hope is evoked so powerfully, visually that it becomes easy to let words of risk go in one ear and out the other.  In the end, the images convey the message.  Words become irrelevant.

Fallen

Of course, this is nothing new.  Peoples’ visual and auditory responses and perceptions have been manipulated throughout human history, as a means to some end.  I guess that’s what I am struggling with right now.  When I watch a movie or movie trailer or attend a concert or an art exhibit or even a religious service, I am open to being manipulated.  I await the melding of music, words and images to make me experience a story.  But it’s when that manipulation happens in other contexts that I become wary and quite frankly on occasion angry.  Artistically, I am looking forward to exploring these ideas in both my photography and writing, and to better understand how other artists use these ideas and I don’t mean in a Wag the Dog kind of way.

 

Read Full Post »

Abstract Reflections

This morning I’d put the television on mute as I worked on a paper.  When I finished the paper, I looked up and saw Michele Bachmann being interviewed by Bob Schieffer on CBS’s Face the Nation.  I turned the television off and prepared to walk away.  Then I stopped, sighed and turned the television back on.  I decided I should “walk my talk.”

You see,  I often tell younger friends of mine, especially young relatives, no matter what your political stance, first, be sure you vote, and second, vote responsibly – be informed.  So today, I decided to better inform myself about this candidate instead of only listening to heresay.  Well, without getting too personal, I’ll share a few things that stood out to me.

First, it will be a sad day in journalism when Bob Schieffer is no longer behind the desk.  In clear, concise, respectful language, he asked questions that showed without a doubt that he had done his homework and that he was prepared to ask the hard questions.  He was not to be distracted.

Second, it was sad to see once more that no matter how direct the question, even if repeated, candidates are well-trained in delivering non-answers.  I took public speaking.  It is amazing to see the tools being put to work so well by Ms. Bachmann (and all the other candidates).

Finally …

It may be my imagination but it seems that candidates, male and female, of any party, are so gloriously put together these days that they remind me of watching Entertainment Tonight or any of a half-dozen reality TV shows.  As I watch Bachmann, Perry and all the others on television, I just wonder if people are actually listening to candidates’ words or dazzled by their appearance.  It might make an interesting challenge as candidates share their thoughts on screen, to keep the sound up, but somehow “mute” the image.

 

 

Read Full Post »

I have written before of my views through various Somerville windows especially the ones in Steve’s kitchen.   From one window in particular I like to stare down into a small garden.  This year the landlord has been preoccupied so the garden is overrun in a beautiful way.  Rose and purple morning glories entwine every surface, including the tall stalks of the sunflowers.

Greek oregano overshadows Thai basil.  Rosemary holds its own against a crumbling retaining wall.  Green tomatoes grow ever larger watched lustfully by gray squirrels that live in the adjacent oak tree and the “rat” whose home is beneath the garden.  I put rat in quotes because there is some disagreement whether the furry fellow is a rat or some other long-nosed, long-whiskered, long-tailed creature. Regardless, I still call him Roscoe Rat when I spy him nibbling on roots.  No names do I give to the sparrows, starlings and sparrows.  There are just too many and while lovely they seem indistinguishable as they skip around for insects and seeds.  Nor do I try to name the most recent visitor, a bright yellow finch.  Each morning for a week it has dropped out of the sky to alight upon the sunflowers.  Each visit is only five seconds or so.  How much longer he will visit before migrating onward I do not know.  Even if he should appear no more the memories of his presence remain indelible.  Two shades of gold together, feathered and petaled, touched by early morning sunlight.

 

Read Full Post »

Steve has two tables in his kitchen.  There is the larger central table where meals are served, but against the wall near a window there is a smaller table and that’s the one that holds my attention at this moment.  Sunlight pours through the window.  A variety of plants bask in the warmth.  Steve’s rosemary bushes.   A mug of basil. A rather mutant African Violet, a gift from a friend, that he refuses to replant … he’s hoping it will break free of its clay pot, and like the plant in the Rocky Horror Picture Show, start shouting, “Feed me!” Then there’s a clear glass vase of lemon yellow mums and a red pot of soon-to-bloom paperwhites.  Tucked here and there beneath the foliage small jewel-colored glass votives, a green bowl filled with oranges, and an empty mason jar that held  sliced strawberries just yesterday.

Above the plants, through the window, the sky is the lightest blue.  Seagulls fly all around, as do flocks of sparrows and pigeons.  The hawks are not nearby.  A gentle wind rocks the branches of the oak tree next to the house, and those of the maples across the street.  It is still winter, of course, so far too soon, the sun will set spectacularly, casting a warm golden light across the kitchen walls.  And then, even before I can race to grab my camera, everything will disappear into shadow.  For a little while.

Read Full Post »

On my mind of late has been the idea of the missed picture.  Was there a moment when I should have taken a picture and instead I “wimped out?” It is not a question raised lightly.  Usually, if I see something and I happen to have my camera, then great.  If I don’t, then I simply have to be present and enjoy that moment.  And maybe that’s the key word:  enjoy.   The incident that I purposefully missed was not one that I think of with joy.

The moment took place when Steve and I were traveling around down south.  We entered an establishment through a gate.  On either side of the gate entrance stood black lawn jockeys.  Now before I continue, let me be quick to state that everywhere we traveled people were welcoming and inclusive, and if I stood out as the only person of color, no one made mention of the fact.  As we left the establishment, having had a great time inside, Steve asked if I wanted to take a picture of the lawn jockeys, as an image that I could use to provoke conversation about a topic that people find difficult to discuss.  I said no.  We drove away. 

I have no image captured in pixels, but the moment will remain with me.  All the moments remain with me, when I am reminded of the complexities of race in this country and how that complexity has played out over time.  And still does.

Read Full Post »

A nice surprise today when I checked email today and saw the latest Orion Magazine newsletter.  At the bottom of the page, in the “Places Where You Live” area, there was a link to “a couple of our favorites.”  Well, one of the favorites was a link for Somerville, Massachusetts.  Since I live in Somerville, I clicked on the link and what did I see?  Well, you can see for yourself.  I hope you enjoy.

http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/place_where_you_live/view/somerville_ma_5820/

Read Full Post »

If you could travel back in time, what would you share in 15 seconds with your 15-year old self?

That is the writing prompt a friend shared with me yesterday at work.  I did not have an answer until I pulled a book from my shelf at home, a book I had not read in a long while.  When I cracked it open, out fell a bookmark inscribed with the following words:  Remember that happiness is a way of travel — not a destination.

I think that is what I would tell my 15-year old self.  I might also mention:  And, no matter what, remember to breathe. 😉

Read Full Post »

I got the blues…

I just realized that I am wearing several layers of blue from the blue checked sneakers on my feet to the blue pearl necklace around my neck.  In between, I’m wearing dark blue jeans and a blue t-shirt under a blue sweater.  When I turned on my computer, I was met by a new desktop of blue mountains.  Since blue is my favorite color, I hope this bodes well for my day. 😉

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »