• Page Not Found

    While looking for Wieland Wagner pictures for my “Woyzeck” post, I came across this excellent Page Not Found error page at Frankfurt Opera.

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  • Woyzeck

    Two nights ago we saw “Woyzeck” by Tom Waits, Kathleen Brennan, and Robert Wilson at BAM.

    The music is amazing. Tom Waits’s music at this point is that of a new Kurt Weill, and I mean Weill at his best. We were sitting on the front row, so it was fun to be able to watch the small orchestra as it played. The lyrics (created by him and his wife Kathleen Brennan) are brilliant. They never choose the clichéd or obvious word in a phrase. In “Coney Island Baby”:

    Every night she comes
    To take me out to dreamland
    When I’m with her, I’m the richest
    Man in the town

    I almost expected the phrase to be “the richest man in the world”, but “town” works so much better.

    Some other favorites from various songs:

    The plural of spouse is spice.

    God’s Away, God’s away
    God’s away on Business. Business.

    She’s a rose, she’s the pearl
    She’s the spin on my world
    All the stars make their wishes on her eyes

    I’m not crazy about Robert Wilson. I think he has some good ideas and things are often attractive, but he’s in a rut. His style hasn’t changed much over the last ten years, and there are certain gestures — such as a spotlight only on a character’s hand — that have become rote. There were however, a few fabulous moments. When Marie and the Drum Major have their first big scene together, at one point she is singing “Everything Goes to Hell”:

    I don’t like dirty dishes in the sink. Please don’t tell me what you feel or what you think.

    and she sits on his back as he crawls across the floor on all fours. It’s hard to describe well, but the audience burst into spontaneous applause before it was completely over.

    Anyone who has seen images of Wieland Wagner‘s [framed site – hit cancel if asked] productions at Bayreuth can realize that Wilson is not as much as an innovator, in terms of visuals, as many people think.

    At the reception afterward we talked with our friends Charles and Ray, fellow BAM-ites not to be confused with the artist Charles Ray, and looked at the celebrities: Isabella Rossellini, and Russian gay activist/poet/porn star Slava. James has some good links for him.

    Many of the songs from “Woyzeck” are available on Tom Waits’s “Blood Money” CD. I talk about that CD plus his “Alice” — both highly recommended — here.

    Later today I will add a couple of MP3s from “Blood Money” and “Alice”.

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  • I love a Man in Uniform

    The Guardian has an article on two small town policemen, a gay couple, in South Africa.

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  • Em & Lo’s UK Debut

    My friends Emma and Lorelei (of Nerve fame) have just made their debut in the Guardian.

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  • Our war in Afghanistan

    I’m tired of listening to people talking about how we bombed Afghanistan because of our more enlightened view of women. Most of the government isn’t in favor of women’s rights — being only slightly to the left of the Taliban on that issue.

    We’re not interested in putting enough resources into the country to stabilize it, only enough to get started working on an oil pipeline.

    Vandals, With Fire and Rockets, Attack 4 Afghan Girls’ Schools

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  • Great letter in Salon

    … by Christopher Dazey on media coverage of anti-war rallies. Here is a sample, but you should read the whole thing, plus the rest of the letters. As a group, they are one of the best discussions of the art of protest — including all of the fringe groups and seeming off-topic speakers that often drive us all crazy when we attend one.

    Michelle Goldberg’s disappointment with the protesters in Washington over their apparent lack of a coherent message is akin to a campaign manager saying that her candidate should “stay on message.” However, the protesters were not running for office, and the language of corrupt, corporate politics should not be applied to grassroots movements.

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  • Cheney disinvited to Wellstone’s Funeral

    Good for the Wellstone family! They have disinvited Dick Cheney from the memorial service, because they’re unhappy at the vociferous Republican attacks on Mondale even before he is a candidate. [Link via TBOGG]

    Newt Gingrich went on “Meet the Press’ to say that Mondale supported privatization of Social Security. Isn’t the GOP in favor of that? You would think he would be more careful about lying about something that could easily be investigated.

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  • Williamsburg galleries

    We went to Williamsburg this afternoon to see our friend Meighan Gale’s show at Black & White Gallery, on its last day. If you like what you see on the web site, you can call the gallery to see the work. I saw some paintings from the next show, by Lael Marshall, that looked promising.

    Other highlights:

    A great drawing show at Parker’s Box, with works by Simon Faithfull (often drawn on a palm pilot and blown up) and Bruno Peinado.

    Bjørn Melhus at Roebling Hall: fabulous video show, with my favorite work (titled “Oral Fixation”) being a weird talk show, with all of the dialogue sampled from actual shows.

    I also saw this solar-powered peace sign, a project of Think Global Peace.

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  • Ha’aretz has had it

    The only Middle Eastern paper I read regularly — Ha’aretz seems to have had it with the settlers and the increasing destruction of anything resembling a sensible government in Israel. Who can blame them? The settlers are destroying any moral credibility that Israel once had. They are no better than the apartheid government of South Africa, and they are increasingly the people who set the terms of debate in Israel.

    Buried in the stories (here is one from the Daily News, not exactly a pro-Palestinian paper) of the latest suicide bomber is this:

    Six miles away, a mob of 10 Jewish settlers set upon 30 Palestinian farm workers and peace activists, pummeling them with stones and rifle butts, when they heard about the attack.

    A Palestinian couple, their two children and four activists were treated at a nearby hospital for their injuries.

    An American, James Deleplain, 74, suffered a possible broken rib and an American-British citizen, Mary Hughes-Thompson, 68, had both arms broken, according to the International Solidarity Movement.

    Those attacked were harvesting olives.

    One of today’s Ha’aretz essays, titled “Before Jewish fascism takes over”, discusses interesting similarities between this era and that of the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans. Yossi Sarid argues that what caused Jerusalem to collapse was zealotry, and Israel faces the same danger today:

    There was no “civil war” in those days because wars require two sides. The zealots of the day decided during the Great – and doomed – Revolt against the Romans to begin a campaign of organized terror against all those they decided were too moderate. The domestic terror toppled the responsible leadership, which feared the zealotry that fell upon them. The leadership threw up its hands in surrender without battle, so there was no “civil war.”

    The crazed “patriots” didn’t cool off until they had managed to burn all the grain silos of Jerusalem, driving the residents of the besieged city into hunger and making certain that if there had been any chance for the Great Revolt, the fall of Jerusalem became inevitable. Therefore it was Jewish zealotry that destroyed the Second Commonwealth – and not a civil war.

    It appears likely that the Labor party will leave the government over its opposition to payments to the illegal settlements in the Occupied Territories. It also appears that the government won’t fall, forcing new elections, because a far right party will join Sharon’s government. That party is National Union-Yisrael Beiteinu, which has advocated mass expulsions of Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza. I think it’s time for Israelis to ask themselves how they’ve reached this point. I read a quote from an American Viet Nam veteran at Saturday’s anti-war rally in DC, who said, “If violence made people safer, Israel would be perfectly safe”.

    But wait, there’s more.

    There is a column by Akiva Eldar in which he argues that the Labor Party has abandoned American Jews, allowing the right to have its say, and to be able to argue that Americans support Sharon’s government.

    The lack of an alternative to the Sharon/Ben-Eliezer government has paralyzed the supporters of compromise inside the Jewish community. MK Avshalom Vilan, who recently visited Washington as part of a Peace Coalition delegation, says that congressmen, including Jewish congressmen, were surprised to learn that the majority of the Israeli public supports the establishment of a Palestinian state and opposes the settlements. The pro-Israeli lobby constantly feeds them information about corruption in the Palestinian Authority, but they’ve never been told that in less than 10 years there will be an Arab majority between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River. Obviously, nobody asks them to protest the highway robbery of olive harvesters and the land grabs of Palestinian properties.

    The leaders of Reform and other liberal movements in American Judaism admit to their friends in the Israeli peace camp that their communities refuse to listen to a word of criticism about the Israeli government’s policies. “How can you expect us to pressure the administration to change its attitudes to Sharon’s brutal policies,” they ask, “when the Labor Party’s leader executes those policies and the Nobel Peace Prize laureate [Shimon Peres] does such a good job of explaining the policies?”

    For that sin, the abandonment of American Jewry, the peace camp may yet pay for many years to come.

    I’ll end with an excerpt from one of today’s editorials — “The settlers’ persecution”.

    The settlers of Itamar in the West Bank have taken upon themselves security powers and are violently chasing away the farmers from the adjacent villages of Yanoun and Akrabeh. According to reports from the villagers, armed settlers are riding into the villages on all-terrain vehicles and are threatening and beating the farmers who are going out to harvest the olive trees they own or lease, thereby undermining their principal source of income at this time of the year.

    This ongoing persecution – which has been accompanied by gunfire directed at the farmers and their homes, the torching of the Yanoun village generator and the contamination of the well in the area – has already caused most of the village residents to abandon their homes. The village, which was once home to 150 families, now has less than 10 families living there.

    Dozens of complaints dating as far back as 1998 and concerning the vandalization of property have been filed by the village residents with the Israel Police, but these have gone no further than a confirmation of their receipt. Till now, no one has stood trial and no indictments have been served against the persecutors.

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  • Electronic voting

    Since we live in a third-world country, unlike Brazil, we don’t have electronic voting in our small towns. There is a good slashdot discussion on this here.

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