Thursday, January 27, 2011

Heavy Weather


How easy it is to be under the weather. Time to focus inward, and listen.


I absolutely love the cosmopolitan pick-up that plays out in the song's first minute. Something about chèvre Couldn't tell you - I'm still learning French.


When listening to Stevie Wonder, a friend asked, "is there a genre of music called 'classic'". I can't help but say yes.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Today marks the 40th anniversary of John F. Kennedy's innaugural address. A 14-minute long ode to American exceptionalism and the power of idealistic individualism.

Robert Frost composed a poem, 'Dedication', for the event. Unable to read the poem in the blinding sunlight, the 86-year old Frost recited from memory a passage from an earlier work, 'The Gift Outright'.

Elsewhere - the JFK Library has uploaded a staggeringly comprehensive collection of photographs of the 35th President of our United States.


Poetry

Tanto vos quiso la magnificencia

Dotar de virtudes y congloriar

Que muchos procuran de vos imitar

En vida y en toda virtud y prudencia.

{So did magnificence strive/to crown your virtue with glory / that many seek to copy / your wise and virtuous life.}

-Juan de Mena, Praise of Marqués de Santillana, Migo López de Mendoza

A deliberately poetic vocabulary, a record of ideas incompatible with common speech, would be a different matter, however. The world of appearance is complicated, and language has only verbalized a miniscule part of its potential, indefatigable combinations.

-Jorges Luis Borges “Verbiage for Poems”


Poetry always seemed to me to be a seldom well done, and rather self-serving pursuit. Borges argues that the job of a poet is akin to that of a Physicist or Biologist. As our knowledge of the world has grown, so too has the wealth of descriptive language we have at our disposal. He asks, why not "create a word...for our lack of trust in ourselves after we have done wrong?" As our language grows so too does our world - language (poetry included) therefore can be seen as an exercise in expanding the limits of our reality.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011



The snow the sleet/ and fiery heat/ have no hold,/ No sway, no seat/ in the heart of the bold./The king of the whirl.

Success! Finally convinced my boss to let me take a class: "Cultural Capital & Development". Now starts the hard part.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Courage

'Man on Wire' is perhaps my favourite movie. It crackles with charm and authenticity - exuding the kind of beauty that movies rarely even approach.

Petit's idea of a beautiful death, and a beautiful life, is so very compelling because it speaks to a passion that is as rare as his singular accomplishment pictured above.

Deviant, madman, clown, icon: Petit draws an interesting cast of characters around himself, yet he remains a "castaway on the island of his dreams". That too is one of the film's great takeaways: sometimes the most iconoclastic and aberrative behaviour is the most universally savored.
Commit Yourself To Deviancy
Reclining Nude - Modigliani, the Barnes Collection, Merion PA.

The ship rights herself, the captain long since lost. The path subverted, the destination submerged.

A studied nonchalance - an anxious attachment to self improvement - "freedom is nothing else but a chance to be better"