May. 3rd, 2015

jazzy_dave: (Default)
Today re selection is another mixed bag of grooves, starting with a track from the CD found yesterday.

Sufjan Stevens - Chicago



Next up,

Fiona Apple - Fast As You Can



Next up, Brighton based artist , Bat For Lashes and Rest Your Head



And finally, well, i just had to return to Joanna,

Joanna Newsom - In California



The last three are also Buffy inspired but are great tracks nonetheless.

Enjoy.
jazzy_dave: (Default)


As promised the Willow inspired selection , thanks to the same source [livejournal.com profile] suchaprince.

Little Numbers - Boy



The Civil Wars - Tip Of My Tongue



The Black Ghosts - Full Moon



And finally,
The Hush Sound - You Are The Moon



Enjoy.
jazzy_dave: (Default)
Tiziano Scarpa "Stabat Mater" (Serpent's Tail)




I loved the writing. Very poetic. The ending was a little bit abrupt, I was expecting something different I guess

There's a fascinating story behind this tale of which this first person narrative gives only glimpses. It's interesting, but ultimately a little frustrating.


"Stabat Mater" is set in a Venetian orphanage for girls run by nuns in what would have been around the 1700s. The girls at the "Ospedale" are trained as musicians and singers who play from a hidden gallery in the adjoining church for the patrons of the Instituto della Pietà. However, this is a highly stylised little book, bordering on the almost poetic, narrated from the point of view of one of the orphans, a young violinist named Cecilia who goes on to tell of the impact of the appointment of a new in-house composer, one Don Antonio, or Vivaldi as most of us know him.

This is rather the strength and weakness of the book. On the one hand, it's a fascinating story with the young Vivaldi composing classical standards for his young orphans - he introduces himself to the girls with a series of compositions based on the four seasons. Not only that, but the whole thing is set in the fascinating glamour of Venice. Add in the strange and peculiar world of a church-based orphanage for young girls and there are stories, you feel, just bursting to be told. And yet, rather like the audience to the performances, the reader only gets tantalizing glimpses of the orphans and the narrative thread in Cecilia's story.

Scarpa's Cecilia is a troubled young girl who cannot sleep and appears to have an eating disorder. At night she creeps to a hidden place to write `letters' to her unknown mother even though these are never sent. The narrative consists of these notes to her mother, strange internal dialogues with a `snake-haired woman' representing death and slightly more conventional journal like entries of events as they unfold. However, there is no clear distinction between these and they all roll into one stream of writing. Once Don Antonio arrives we also get snatches of conversation between the him and Cecilia. This short book concludes with some more translated comments from Scarpa on his admiration of Vivaldi.

It's all rather esoteric which is frustrating when the story and setting is so intrinsically interesting. There is very little of the feel of Venice, nor of the life of the orphans, let alone the impact of Vivaldi's arrival on the scene. In fact, I found myself re-reading the cover blurb around a third of the way in just to make sense of what was going on. While conceptually it's clear that Cecilia has had a tough life which ought to garner the reader's sympathy, her self-pitying tone becomes depressing to read and she does little to win the reader over.

I would guess that if you were skilled enough to read the original Italian, the experience might be more beautiful. That's in no way a negative comment about the quality of the translation, but I wonder if the Italian language lends itself better to the almost poetic quality of her musings. Scarpa has Cecilia noting that words are inferior to music in explaining her feelings and somehow his book rather supported this comment in this instance for me.

  A short book that can be read in a a couple of days. 
jazzy_dave: (Default)
Here is a piece of thoughtful poetry recited by the guy who does the BtVS guides.

The Miracle Of Man
Words by Robert Ardrey:

But we were born of risen apes, not fallen angels,
and the apes were armed killers besides.
And so what shall we wonder at? Our murders and massacres and missiles,
and our irreconcilable regiments?
Or our treaties whatever they may be worth;
our symphonies however seldom they may be played;
our peaceful acres, however frequently they may be converted into battlefields;
our dreams however rarely they may be accomplished.
The miracle of man is not how far he has sunk but how magnificently he has risen.
We are known among the stars by our poems, not our corpses.



Music is by Explosions in the Sky "Six Days At the Bottom of the Ocean" .
jazzy_dave: (Default)
I seem to be in this funk of melancholic grooves , having a BtVS overdose no less. Hey kids bring it on - a Buffy  / Angel selection!



First off,
Cinematic Orchestra - To Build A Home



Next,
Tom McRae - My Vampire Heart



I am glad to include this one -
Bjork - Pagan Poetry



Finally, this one made me blub all the way -

Dinah Washngton and Max Richter - This Bitter Earth / On The Nature of Daylight



Enjoy.

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