他们在等我们的时候给我们买好了午饭,我根本吃不下,啃了几口,就冲进厕所化妆。这样的场合,looks are as important as the substance. :)
其实,我是晕车晕飞机大王,尤其是这样起了大早地赶飞机,更是天旋地转,不知东南西北。结果今天还真是 so far so good, 头脑清醒得很,别看时间紧张,我还是从从容容,胸有成竹。看来还是以前在撒娇,如今凤凰落地、虎落平阳,该tough的时候,我们也不是吃干饭的。:)
同行的,就有那个MVP (the mean Vice President, not the Most Valued Player:)).不过事到如今,我根本没有心思顾及他。
哇,人家的办公大楼真气派,外墙一律是浅灰色厚重的石头:谁说现代建筑一定要全部玻璃钢筋。进去以后,略略寒喧了几句,就匆忙接电脑、投影。然后我就开始云山雾罩了。:):)三个小时下来后,尘埃落定,本大使胜利完成使命。MVP 专门给有关人物们发文吹牛,说本人 led the technical discussion in great detail and with great zeal and credibility. 哈哈,zeal 一词让人略略觉得好笑,临行前,我就和V说过,我怎么越来越觉得我们的东西是真好啊,他就说,There is a word for that. It's called bullshitting. :)
丹佛我从来没有来过,W以前在这里,还帮我给这里的研究生院交过申请费,我却没有来这个蛮荒之地,他也于几年前海归了。搜索枯肠,想一想这里的风景名胜,也想不大起来,若是有时间,大约会去看看 Mile High Stadium, Denver Bronco 的 John Elway 曾经战斗过的地方。其它的也就是一个机场,象一个大帐篷,倒是和周围沙漠一般的风景有些协调;路边还有一匹马的雕塑,奇怪的深蓝还是深紫的颜色,就是 Bronco 了。
到了波士顿已是午夜以后。飞机着陆时忙着给先生打电话,忙着给出租车公司打电话,一不小心,电脑被邻居提走:他的电脑跟我的差不多一样,不过他的钱包证件都在里头,是从DC来的,哈哈,男人真是有意思,钱包里总是装那么多现金。:)广播里大声叫我,我去办公室里等他,告诉服务人员是他先错的。服务人员说,当然了,it's always the man's fault.恋恋不舍地换了包--那么多钱哦--订的出租车居然没来,不过出租车站多的是车,轮到我这里的是一名亚美尼亚司机,喜欢历史,还说,刚刚从《国家地理》上读到了中国。
2。以貌取人:受到多方友情警告:当心A,当心B,they are mean. Haha, A 是公司律师,是个满月脸的矮胖女人,B 是销售部的VP,是个刀条脸的瘦干男人,符合我的先入之见,平时见到这样面相的人我都躲着。这样的人先天不足,对上帝有仇恨,然后将自己心中的怨气转嫁到别人身上,所以么,敬而远之,不得不打交道的时候,谨慎为上,切记切记。:)
I'm singing in the rain 我在雨中歌唱 Just singing in the rain 就这样在雨中歌唱 What a glorious feelin' 多么欢畅的感觉 I'm happy again 幸福重新在我的心中荡漾 I'm laughing at clouds 我向着乌云欢笑 So dark up above 天上是黑沉沉的乌云 The sun's in my heart 阳光却充溢着我的心 And I'm ready for love 我再次迎接爱情
Don Lockwood: Doo-dloo-doo-doo-doo Doo-dloo-doo-doo-doo-doo Doo-dloo-doo-doo-doo-doo Doo-dloo-doo-doo-doo-doo...
I'm singing in the rain Just singing in the rain What a glorious feelin' I'm happy again I'm laughing at clouds So dark up above The sun's in my heart And I'm ready for love Let the stormy clouds chase Everyone from the place Come on with the rain I've a smile on my face I walk down the lane With a happy refrain Just singin', Singin' in the rain
Dancin' in the rain Dee-ah dee-ah dee-ah Dee-ah dee-ah dee-ah I'm happy again! I'm singin' and dancin' in the rain!
I'm dancin' and singin' in the rain... [ADDITIONAL VERSE] Why am I smiling And why do I sing? Why does September Seem sunny as spring? Why do I get up Each morning and start? Happy and head up With joy in my heart Why is each new task A trifle to do? Because I am living A life full of you.
R下周一手术,所以他今天就正式向我告别了。R很怪僻,他那种消极、干巴的幽默感,能够体会的人不多,能够欣赏的人就更少了。碰上我这个“知己”,他自然如获至宝,每次路过,都要东找西找,绞尽脑汁,说点小笑话,然后等着我的反应。以前是The Simpsons, 后来是电视里的一些 game show, 他最喜欢的好象是 Deal No Deal. 他从前喜欢抽烟喝酒,若干年前戒了酒,再若干年前又戒了烟,但一切都为时已晚,他的身体早已经千孔百疮。
Alex Ross: The Rest is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century October 2007
Sounds like an interesting book. Read about it on New Yorker.
"We follow the rise of mass culture and mass politics, of dramatic new technologies, of hot and cold wars, of experiments, revolutions, riots, and friendships forged and broken. The end result is not so much a history of twentieth-century music as a history of the twentieth century through its music." The Rest is Noise: Alex Rose's Blog
其余的都是噪音:聆听二十世纪的音乐
Because composers have infiltrated every aspect of modern existence, their work can be depicted only on the largest possible canvas. The Rest is Noise chronicles not only the artists themselves but also the politicians, dictators, millionaire patrons, and CEOs who tried to control what music was written; the intellectuals who attempted to adjudicate style; the writers, painters, dancers, and filmmakers who provided companionship on lonely roads of exploration; the audiences who variously reveled in, reviled, or ignored what composers were doing; the technologies that changed how music was made and heard; and the revolutions, hot and cold wars, waves of emigration, and deeper social transformations that reshaped the landscape in which composers worked.
What the march of history really has to do with music itself is the subject of sharp debate. In the classical field it has long been fashionable to fence music off from society, to declare it a self-sufficient language. In the hyper-political twentieth century, that barrier crumbles time and again: Bela Bartok writes string quartets inspired by field recordings of Transylvanian folks songs, Shostakovich works on his Leningrad Symphony while German guns are firing on the city, Johan Adams creates an opera starring Richard Nixon and Mao Zedong. Nevertheless, articulating the connection between music and the outer world remains devilishly difficult. Musical meaning is vague, mutable, and in the end, deeply personal. Still, even if history can never tell us exactly what music means, music can tell us something about history. My subtitle is meant literally; this is the twentieth century heard through its music.
A list of recommended recordings: (See the end of the book)
http://www.therestisnoise.com/2007/10/twentieth-centu.html — Mahler, "Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen" from Rückert Lieder; Kathleen Ferrier, Bruno Walter conducting the Vienna Philharmonic (Decca) — "Ah! Ich habe deinen Mund geküsst, Jochanaan" from Salome; Hildegard Behrens, Herbert von Karajan conducting the Vienna Philharmonic (EMI) — Schoenberg, Six Little Pieces Op. 19: II; Mitsuko Uchida (Philips) — Webern, Six Pieces for Orchestra Op. 6: IV; James Levine conducting the Berlin Philharmonic (DG) — Stravinsky, "Danse sacrale" from The Rite of Spring; Stravinsky conducting the Columbia Symphony (Sony) — Bartók, String Quartet No. 4: III; Takács Quartet (Decca) — Stravinsky, "Marche du Soldat" from Histoire du Soldat; Stravinsky conducting the Columbia Symphony (Sony) — Ives, "The 'St. Gaudens' in Boston Common" from Three Places in New England; Michael Tilson Thomas conducting the San Francisco Symphony (RCA) — Sibelius, Symphony No. 5: III; Osmo Vänskä conducting the Lahti Symphony (BIS) — Weill, "Alabama Song"; Lotta Lenya (Sony) — Shostakovich, Symphony No. 5: IV; Leonard Bernstein conducting the New York Philharmonic (Sony) — Copland, Quiet City; Copland conducting the London Symphony (Sony) — Messiaen, "Louange à l'éternité de Jésus" from Quartet for the End of Time; Ensemble Walter Boeykens (Harmonia Mundi) — Xenakis, Metastaseis; Michael Gielen conducting the SWR Symphony (col legno) — Cage, Sonatas and Interludes: Sonata No. 5; Herbert Henck (ECM) — Feldman, Madame Press Died Last Week At Ninety; John Adams conducting the Orchestra of St. Luke's (Nonesuch) — Britten, "On the ground, sleep sound" from A Midsummer Night's Dream; Britten conducting (Decca) — Ligeti, "Lacrimosa" from Requiem; Jonathan Nott conducting the Berlin Philharmonic and London Voices (Teldec) — Reich, Drumming: IV; Steve Reich and Musicians (Nonesuch) — Adams, "I am old and cannot sleep" from Nixon in China; Sanford Sylvan, Edo de Waart conducting the Orchestra of St. Luke's (Nonesuch)
http://www.therestisnoise.com/2004/05/what_is_this.html Table of Contents: PART I: 1900-1933 1. THE GOLDEN AGE: Mahler, Strauss, and the Fin de Siècle Excerpt 2. DOCTOR FAUST: Schoenberg, Debussy, and Atonality 3. DANCE OF THE EARTH: The Rite, the Folk, le Jazz 4. INVISIBLE MEN: American Composers from Ives to Ellington 5. APPARITION FROM THE WOODS: The Loneliness of Jean Sibelius Excerpt (published in The New Yorker) 6. CITY OF NETS: Berlin in the Twenties PART II: 1933-1945 7. THE ART OF FEAR: Music in Stalin’s Russia 8. MUSIC FOR ALL: Music in FDR’s America 9. DEATH FUGUE: Music in Hitler’s Germany PART III: 1945-2000 10. ZERO HOUR: The U.S. Army and German Music, 1945-1949 11. BRAVE NEW WORLD: The Cold War and the Avant-Garde of the Fifties 12. “GRIMES! GRIMES!”: The Passion of Benjamin Britten 13. ZION PARK: Messiaen, Ligeti, and the Avant-Garde of the Sixties 14. BEETHOVEN WAS WRONG: Bebop, Rock, and the Minimalists 15. SUNKEN CATHEDRALS: Music at Century’s End
还没有真正离开,突然就已经开始留恋起这个地方。毕竟是自己生命的一部分。来这里interview那一天,稀里糊涂,懵里懵懂,回家的时候,手里就攥着他们的 offer ... 那时候容易满足,不知道工资还是可以讨价还价的。日子也很好记:在这里上班一个多月,二毛就悄悄来了,于是我就天天藏着这个小秘密,一直藏到快五个月才正式告诉小老板。小老板还不到三十岁,芝加哥来的楞头青小伙子,脾气暴躁,对我却是真正细心地体贴关照。惊奇之外,也十分感激。碰到需要请假时,嗫嗫嚅嚅大有惭愧之情,他总是很爽快地:不用解释,go. Your family is way more important.
他走了以后,公司也经历了很多波折……现在的老板很大度,对我们有足够的信任和尊重,从来不死缠硬打。对他来讲,工作不过是一个工作而已;他的口头禅:I'm not gonna lose sleep over this. It is what it is.
乔治·桑1840年代的作品都有社会内容,都是在寻求社会公正。 (P51, Marianne: Letter "To Memebers of the Central Committee":
妇女解放是社会解放的前提,而不是结果:George Sand's foremost hope from a socialist republic was the abolition of male dominance in the private as well as the public sphere. It is clear from this letter that she believed true reform in the personal domain to be a prerequisite rather than a consequence of genuine political reform and that the most effective means of achieving both was through education. (P57)
书的结构,让我想起去年翻过的 Harold Bloom 的 Genius: A Mosaic of One Hundred Exemplary Creative Minds。作者Peter Watson罗列起笔下人物,如数加珍,也象是一块一块地向我们展示着每一块马赛克;展示完毕,我们眼中,就是一幅完整的、包罗万象的、浩繁的二十世纪思想拼图。
读到五十来页,再回头去看作者简介时,突然明白了作者为什么会这样写,为什么能这样写。原来作者是新闻记者出身,生前给英国和美国几家大报写文章,却不是学者出身。恍然大悟。:)任何一个书呆都知道,写“专著”时,题目宜小不宜大,不管题目有多小,只要写出足够的别人不知道的东西,你就可以号称 original research, 然后就可以申请博士学位,申请终身聘任;反过来说,写作时最忌讳铺天盖地,什么都是蜻蜓点水的,是万万使不得的。所以么,这样的拼图著作,就只有靠老沃这样的大胆外行来作了。
Da Mao and Er Mao's Favorite Bus Driver From ### Street she comes closer and closer We pat ourselves on the shoulder We lazy bones, we sleepy heads Every morning, it's a miracle For us to see our driver :)
1。李斯特(Franz Liszt):李斯特帅得要命,听他的音乐会时,女人们会激动得昏过去。他是乔治·桑所喜欢的风流帅哥类型,不过他却不可能爱上乔治·桑,除了她不够漂亮、不够女人味道以外,更重要的是,他认识乔治·桑的时候,正好狂恋着一位大美人,据说是整个十九世纪最超群出众、最漂亮的女人:Comtesse Marie d'Agoult, 她逃开自己的丈夫,和李斯特私奔,还和他一起生了三个孩子。她也算是有头脑的女人,喜欢哲学,和乔治·桑类似,也用了个男人笔名写作 Daniel Stern。后来她与乔治·桑成为陌路,互相说了不少难听话,但却不是为了李帅哥争风吃醋。
“Merimee and I shouted and cursed at each other as the wives of fishmongers would if they possessed larger, more imaginative vocabularies. We devoted ourselves exclusively to insults and hurtful remarks, and not once in the entire week did either of us address a civil comment to the other.":):)
看来还真是一山不能容二虎,老乔这样的强悍女流,在男女关系中只能充当男人的角色,她的情人们只好屈尊当个低眉顺眼的小老婆。:)也有人推测,其实她本质上是性冷淡,早年的修道院生活,和不和谐的婚姻,造就了一个 cold and stiff 的女人。不管她有多少伙伴,她从男人那里都根本得不到肉体的满足,所以她总是很愤怒,很不平和。
Jules Sandeau (George Sand的笔名是从他的名字演化而来),Alfred de Musset, and Frederic Chopin were remarkably similar in many ways. All were some years younger than George Sand, all were of slender build and suffered from ill health. All were exceptionally handsome, reminding observers of delicate beauty, and each was narcissistically concerned with his wardrobe and appearance.
Even a cursory study of their relationships with George Sand reveals that she was the dominant partner, almost always assuming the aggressive role, while she pressed each in turn to become the passive partner. Her less important lovers fitted this same mold, and subjected themselves to her authority. Those who were masculine and aggressive -- among them Prosper Merimee -- remained her lovers only a short time.
性自然更吸引人的眼球,更何况她的性,牵涉到十九世纪法国文坛上几乎所有人物。不过,作者说,当时人的gossip确实夸大了一些,恨不能把乔治·桑认识的所有男人都说成是她的情人,实际上真正是她的情人的,多是比她年轻、英俊、病歪歪的忧郁王子们:Jules Sandeau, Alfred de Musset, Frederic Chopin, Manceau.乔治·桑本人并不漂亮,也比较害羞,在自己的沙龙中都是坐在一旁静听,但她却很有discipline,不肯为了一时行乐“耽误”了自己的写作。所以,她是一个天生的母亲,在所有这些关系中她都扮演的是一个成年人、母亲的角色,这些男人身体柔弱,加上长得漂亮,都是典型的自恋、脆弱的大男孩,碰上个乔治·桑对他们无微不至地关怀,自然巴不得揪着她的裙子撒娇。
刚刚让 Charlie Brown 淡出,又来了一个和他类似的人物。下午接孩子们的时候,大毛提起来学校要来一个作家,要签名售书。很累,不想动,却不舍得让他们放弃这样的机会。作者Jeff Kinney 和我们一个年龄段,也有两个孩子,也是全时工作,十年前开始写这本书。刚开始是陆陆续续在网上贴文字和漫画片,流行后才集成小册子正式出版。尽管在网上已经贴过,这本书还是上了纽约时报的排行榜。
Jeff Kinney 说,他的书开头的故事是真实的。夏天开始的第一天,他迷迷糊糊地睡着了。醒来时,哥哥穿着上学的衣服,很认真地告诉他:完了完了,你睡了一个整个夏天,连我们去 Disney World 你都睡过去了。快起来快起来,学校开学了,咱们该上学去了。
This is a wonderful review of the film. Now I understand why the movie felt more familiar: We are, after all, more Anglosized than Russofied. :))
The cultural and aesthetic challenges of putting Russia's national poem on the big screen
Yuri Senokosov Edward Skidelsky
But what distinguishes Pushkin's work from similar reflections by other Russian writers is its lack of bitterness. The futility of life in no way diminishes its charm or interest for Pushkin. If anything, it adds to it.
手头有几本沙博理或著或译的书,自传An American in China,还有他写的马海德(George Hatem)传记。马海德传记是他送我的-更准确地说,是他女儿沙亚美送给我的。1995年12月,我去他们什刹海的家看他们。老沙刚刚庆祝过八十岁生日,人还很精神。亚美特别热情,还给我看了老沙小时候的照片,五六岁的样子,是中国孩子还穿开档裤的那个年龄,可爱极了。头发梳得整整齐齐,和我看的里根传记里,里根小时候那一本正经的模样象极了。亚美的女儿Stella当时在美国上中学,他们都希望她能够继续在美国读大学,但也知道,要读书必须找到奖学金。后来才知道,那次拜访他们后两个星期,凤子就去世了。