My self-imposed ban on political cable news and internet
election commentary has left something of a hole in my day, which I fill with
walks and visits to YouTube to watch videos of baroque music. This afternoon I listened to a lovely
performance of Monteverdi’s great duet for two countertenors [or, in this
instance, a countertenor and a soprano], Zefiro
torna. I first heard this piece in
Sanders Theater at Harvard, with the great countertenor Russell Oberlin singing
the lead voice. This must be fifty-five
years ago or thereabouts, when countertenors were just making their way in the
American classical music world.
The first countertenor to appear in America [in the 20th
century, at any rate] was of course Alfred Deller. I heard him also at Sanders Theater, and his
voice range was so unfamiliar to American audiences that Deller made it a point
to make a little speech, just so folks could hear that his speaking voice was
in a customary male range. Deller was
not, in fact, a true countertenor, I believe, and wonderful though he was, the
singers who came after him have been markedly better.
One small personal story about countertenors. Back in 1986 or thereabouts, I was driving my
son, Tobias, home from high school one day and I asked, as a father will, what
he had been doing lately in school. He
replied that he had joined a madrigal group there which gave concerts in period
costumes and all. I was delighted, and
replied that when I was at Harvard as an undergraduate, I had sung madrigals
with two of my friends. “What are you singing?”
I asked. He replied by opening his mouth
to sing a few bars. Out of his mouth
came a pure, exquisite countertenor voice.
I was so delighted that I said, “Tobias, that is the most wonderful thing
any son of mine has ever done!” Inasmuch
as Tobias’ older brother had by then earned a reputation as the strongest
junior chess player in America, it was not an idle compliment.
6 comments:
Thank you for your thoughts on withdrawal from the political madness. I am trying too. Even NPR has become unbearable. Don't wake me when it's over.
It is true I have checked out of politics too. But I am always optimistic of the future when they have the Senate Youth C-Span video. When high schoolers criticize the political elite for bickering, it warms my heart.
https://www.c-span.org/video/?406058-1/qa-us-senate-youth-program
From distraction from being over involved in politics and the media, I recommend John Le Carré's novels.
I've read almost all of them over the last 35 years or so. For those who have never read Le Carré, start with The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, but since lots of people have read The Spy and no other Le Carré novel, try Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. That starts slow, as do many Le Carré novels: you read the first 50 or 60 pages and you wonder where this guy is going and suddenly, you're hooked and you have to find out not so much who done it as who is who.
One of the reasons why Le Carré distracts from being obsessed by politics is that Le Carré is a very political spy novelist (he is not Ian Fleming), but he views politics as a spectator from an almost Thucydidean distance: there are no good guys, no party or side which embodies the Good or Reason or Utopia, but there are personal virtues: loyalty, commitment, friendship, love, courage (generally not physical courage in Le Carré by the way).
Thanks for the suggestion. I have read many of the John Le carre novels, so yesterday I ordered from Amazon the latest John Sandford novel about his character Lucas Davenport. Now that I have sworn off politics, I am appalled to discover how much free time I have! I can only go over my next lecture in my head so many times. Maybe I should take up a hobby.
I thought writing was your hobby.
How about reading Hegel or Derrida?
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