<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://www.blogger.com/styles/atom.css" type="text/css"?><feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' xmlns:georss='http://www.georss.org/georss' xmlns:gd='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005' xmlns:thr='http://purl.org/syndication/thread/1.0'><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620</id><updated>2011-11-27T15:51:51.875-08:00</updated><category term='barold'/><category term='steals'/><category term='robbery'/><category term='latvia'/><category term='vodka'/><title type='text'>Rigālia</title><subtitle type='html'>Whit -&gt; Baltic</subtitle><link rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#feed' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default?max-results=100'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/'/><link rel='hub' href='http://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com/'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><generator version='7.00' uri='http://www.blogger.com'>Blogger</generator><openSearch:totalResults>14</openSearch:totalResults><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>100</openSearch:itemsPerPage><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-6389786130518506456</id><published>2008-06-09T05:12:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2008-06-09T05:14:54.448-07:00</updated><title type='text'>My First Baltic Publication</title><content type='html'>&lt;a href="http://www.baltictimes.com/news/articles/20635/"&gt;Baltic Times Film Review: Sex and the City&lt;/a&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-6389786130518506456?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/6389786130518506456/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=6389786130518506456' title='2 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/6389786130518506456'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/6389786130518506456'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/06/my-first-baltic-publication.html' title='My First Baltic Publication'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>2</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-7027994756641326860</id><published>2008-06-05T04:21:00.001-07:00</published><updated>2009-12-01T17:24:44.002-08:00</updated><category scheme='http://www.blogger.com/atom/ns#' term='vodka'/><title type='text'>COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT ALERT</title><content type='html'>My most sincere apologies to SIA "Latvijas Balzams" for my unintentional appropriation of their smooth and satisfying vodka brand. My only consolation is that this blog is also triple-filtered for your enjoyment.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;There will be legitimate content soon, I promise. Till then, enjoy the weather.&lt;div&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;UPDATE: The image formerly occupying the beginning of this post has been removed by its owner. They knew my lawsuit was airtight and they caved. How about that for rule of Law in Eastern Europe? George Soros should knight me.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-7027994756641326860?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/7027994756641326860/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=7027994756641326860' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/7027994756641326860'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/7027994756641326860'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/06/copyright-infringement-alert.html' title='COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT ALERT'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-7346047786720977355</id><published>2008-04-07T03:04:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2008-04-07T03:21:34.848-07:00</updated><title type='text'>"Approximate list of foreign music groups and artists whose repertoires contain ideologically harmful compositions"</title><content type='html'>January, 1985 Directive from the Ukrainian KOMSOMOL, as cited in Alexei Yurchak, E&lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;verything was Forever, Until it Was No Mor&lt;/span&gt;e. New York: Princeton, 2006, p215.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;(Group Name: Type of Propaganda)&lt;br /&gt;1. Sex Pistols: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;2. B-52s: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;3. Madness: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;4. Clash: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;5. Stranglers: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;6. Kiss: neofascism, punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;7. Crocus: violence, cult of strong personality&lt;br /&gt;8. Styx: violence, vandalism&lt;br /&gt;9. Iron Maiden: violence, religious obscuritanism&lt;br /&gt;10: Judas Priest: anticommunism, racism&lt;br /&gt;11. AC/DC: neofascism, violence&lt;br /&gt;12. Sparks: neofascism, racism&lt;br /&gt;13. Black Sabbath: violence, religious obscuritanism&lt;br /&gt;14. Alice Cooper: violence, vandalism&lt;br /&gt;15. Nazareth: violence, religious mysticism&lt;br /&gt;16: Scorpions: violence&lt;br /&gt;17. Gengis Khan: anticommunism, nationalism&lt;br /&gt;18. UFO: violence&lt;br /&gt;19. Pink Floyd (1983): distorstion of Soviet foreign policy ("Soviet agression in Afghanistan")***&lt;br /&gt;20. Talking Heads: myth of the Soviet military threat&lt;br /&gt;21. Perron: eroticism&lt;br /&gt;22. Bohannon: eroticism&lt;br /&gt;23. Originals: sex&lt;br /&gt;24. Donna Summer: eroticism&lt;br /&gt;25. Tina Turner: sex&lt;br /&gt;26. Junior English: sex&lt;br /&gt;27. Canned Heat: homosexuality&lt;br /&gt;28. Munich Machine: eroticism&lt;br /&gt;29. Ramones: punk&lt;br /&gt;30. Van Halen: anti-soviet propaganda&lt;br /&gt;31. Julio Iglesias: neofascism&lt;br /&gt;32. Yazoo: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;33. Depeche Mode: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;34. Village People: violence&lt;br /&gt;35. Ten CC: neofascism&lt;br /&gt;36. Stooges: violence&lt;br /&gt;37. Boys: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;38. Blondie: punk, violence&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;***NB: The list refers specifically to the song "Get Your Filthy Hands off My Desert" from &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;The Final Cut&lt;/span&gt;, which includes the lyric "Brezhnev took Afghanistan" in the midst of a laundry list of Western imperial conquests of the early 1980s. Other albums, such as &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;The Dark Side of the Moon&lt;/span&gt;, and &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;The Wall&lt;/span&gt; were reviewed favorably in the Soviet monthly &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Krugozor&lt;/span&gt;, and described as 'perfectly antibourgeois.' (Yurchak, 217-17)&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-7346047786720977355?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/7346047786720977355/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=7346047786720977355' title='2 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/7346047786720977355'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/7346047786720977355'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/04/approximate-list-of-foreign-music.html' title='&quot;Approximate list of foreign music groups and artists whose repertoires contain ideologically harmful compositions&quot;'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>2</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-3682998258490463571</id><published>2008-04-06T06:07:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2008-12-11T04:34:41.988-08:00</updated><title type='text'>рок на костиах / rock on bones</title><content type='html'>&lt;a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_BMuFcYVvlRc/R_jTWtjiuDI/AAAAAAAAADw/L8UM5Il63f4/s1600-h/xrayrecord.jpg"&gt;&lt;img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_BMuFcYVvlRc/R_jTWtjiuDI/AAAAAAAAADw/L8UM5Il63f4/s400/xrayrecord.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5186127358056380466" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I'm in the middle of a bomb new book: &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;&lt;a href="http://press.princeton.edu/chapters/s8102.html"&gt;Everything Was Forever, Until it Was No More&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;, by Alexei Yurchak, about the peculiar cultural and linguistic situation of the "last soviet generation." Reading it and some of the sources it cites has changed a number of my preconceptions (yes, apparently they still taught that American cold-war propaganda history in the 1990s) about the latter years of the USSR. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Anyway there is a chapter on the "Imaginary West," in which Yurchak explains one of the most important clandestine technologies of its time: the copying of LP records onto used x-ray plates. It was invented by engineering students at Leningrad University, with the full support of a government zealous for any kind of technological innovation, and became the principal means by which western music was spread across the USSR (one could call it an "underground," except, as Yurchak emphasizes again and again in this book, just about everyone was in this "underground," even though the vast majority of them did not harbor a great deal of oppositional resentment towards the state). &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Apparently x-ray plates were used mainly because they were the most widely available plastic medium thick enough for the process, which involved a do-it-yourself rigging up of two turntables. For anyone interested in theories of media or technological reproducibility there is a field day to be had in the many ironies and implications of this process - not just the fact of the re-inscription of the x-rays themselves, but also the immense cultural significance of this goofy invention. There's a good description on a &lt;a href="http://medgadget.com/archives/2006/09/old_bootleg_rec.html"&gt;medical devices blog (which I read daily, of course...&lt;/a&gt;).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_BMuFcYVvlRc/R_jTW9jiuEI/AAAAAAAAAD4/T_YimhqedSA/s1600-h/X-ray2.jpg"&gt;&lt;img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_BMuFcYVvlRc/R_jTW9jiuEI/AAAAAAAAAD4/T_YimhqedSA/s400/X-ray2.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5186127362351347778" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_BMuFcYVvlRc/R_jTW9jiuFI/AAAAAAAAAEA/CRZB1IJvOpY/s1600-h/X-ray3.jpg"&gt;&lt;img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_BMuFcYVvlRc/R_jTW9jiuFI/AAAAAAAAAEA/CRZB1IJvOpY/s400/X-ray3.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5186127362351347794" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-3682998258490463571?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/3682998258490463571/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=3682998258490463571' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/3682998258490463571'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/3682998258490463571'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/04/rock-on-bones.html' title='рок на костиах / rock on bones'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media='http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/' url='http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_BMuFcYVvlRc/R_jTWtjiuDI/AAAAAAAAADw/L8UM5Il63f4/s72-c/xrayrecord.jpg' height='72' width='72'/><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-4876165794617691070</id><published>2008-04-02T17:07:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2008-04-02T17:42:03.007-07:00</updated><title type='text'>"protest the contamination of our cultures" [?!?]</title><content type='html'>&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight:bold;"&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.ams-net.org/AMS-Board-Torture-resolution-2008-03-15.php"&gt;Resolution on the Use of Music in Physical or Psychological Torture&lt;/a&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;    &lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;"Whereas, we, the Board of Directors of the American Musicological Society, join the chorus of protest and dissent against the use of physical and psychological torture, finding such torture incompatible with respect for the dignity of all persons; and&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Whereas, we, as scholars and musicians who devote our lives to sustaining musical cultures throughout the world, protest the contamination of our cultures by the misappropriation of music as a weapon of psychological torture;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Now, therefore, we  condemn the use of music as a weapon of torture, and we call upon members of the American Musicological Society to exercise their rights and petition their political representatives to ban this use.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Approved 15 March 2008&lt;br /&gt;Board of Directors, American Musicological Society"&lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-4876165794617691070?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/4876165794617691070/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=4876165794617691070' title='5 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/4876165794617691070'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/4876165794617691070'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/04/protest-contamination-of-our-cultures.html' title='&quot;protest the contamination of our cultures&quot; [?!?]'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>5</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-5001481070772724967</id><published>2008-04-01T15:45:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2008-04-01T15:46:44.647-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Astana, the new capital of Kazakhstan, in a dust storm</title><content type='html'>&lt;a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.funonthenet.in/images/stories/forwards/Dust%20Storms/dust-storm-Kazakhstan.jpg"&gt;&lt;img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px;" src="http://www.funonthenet.in/images/stories/forwards/Dust%20Storms/dust-storm-Kazakhstan.jpg" border="0" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-5001481070772724967?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/5001481070772724967/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=5001481070772724967' title='1 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/5001481070772724967'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/5001481070772724967'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/04/astana-new-capital-of-kazakhstan-in.html' title='Astana, the new capital of Kazakhstan, in a dust storm'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>1</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-2458879568057572900</id><published>2008-04-01T04:35:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2008-04-01T06:06:05.127-07:00</updated><title type='text'>folk, völk, and tauta</title><content type='html'>The below was posted at the bottom of the recent &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;New York Times&lt;/span&gt; &lt;a href="http://movies.nytimes.com/2007/12/14/movies/14revo.html?st=cse&amp;sq=singing+revolution&amp;scp=1"&gt;review&lt;/a&gt; of &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.singingrevolution.com/"&gt;The Singing Revolution&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;, a documentary film about the anti-soviet protest movements in Estonia in the 1980s.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Correction: December 29, 2007&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A brief film review in Weekend on Dec. 14 about “The Singing Revolution,” a documentary about Estonia’s struggle to end Soviet occupation, misidentified the site of the Estonian song festival. It is in Tallinn, the capital — not Tartu, where some festivals were held in the 19th century. The review also referred incorrectly to the songs performed at the festival that are shown in the film. They were written by composers; they are not folk songs.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;br /&gt;What interests me is the way "folk songs" are defined - they cannot be "written by composers." &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Obviously every song must come from somewhere, and many (if not all)  "folk songs" were indeed composed at one point, in many cases by an individual. And no, contrary to what we in our self-conscious modernity might want to think, the idea of the individual author was not foreign to rural pagan communities in 700 A.D., although of course one must imagine that authorship didn't mean what it does today. Regardless, the reporter is clearly not trying to make any kind of categorical argument in his assertion of genre distinctions, but the problem of defining a folk song is so integral to the study of music in this region that it is hard to let it rest. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The distinction being made is, in fact, blurrier than one might think. The songs referred to in the film are not original popular or classical compositions. They are arrangements and adaptations of previously existing "folk" material, transcribed or recorded by ethnomusicologists in the Estonian countryside in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The degree of self-conscious originality in the arrangement or the adaptation varies, but usually the aim is more to get the "authentic" material into a format conducive to trained choirs, and often to harmonize it in a way that enhances its appeal as spectacle. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So while on the one hand the imagined rootedness of the melodic, rhythmic, structural and, perhaps most importantly, textual material in the folk tradition is important, no one is bending over backwards to preserve its authenticity. A pre-modern, rural, improvisatory aural tradition is being adapted to a modern, urban, literate tradition. The implication of a connection between the contemporary mass spectacle and the idealized rural past is enough to satisfy the ideological needs of the &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;völkish&lt;/span&gt; nationalist.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And yet many people refer to this choral repertoire as "folk songs." Are they incorrect in doing so? &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Well, for one thing, there's an ambiguity between the English and the Latvian. The best kind of ambiguity.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;First there is the problem of our word "folk" - it doesn't really mean &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;völk&lt;/span&gt;, the German word which acquired its current semantic currency at the behest of Herder. In English, the "folk" tends to imply that imaginary group of people (living or dead? who knows...) out in the countryside somewhere - it's always somebody else, never "us". In Germany, on the other hand, &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;völk&lt;/span&gt; means something like "people," in the sense in which we might say "the Latvian people." Thus it refers to a group with a common history, and in the Herderian sense, a common, pre-modern folk history: an &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;ethnie&lt;/span&gt; or, for the few remaining Herderians out there, a &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;nation&lt;/span&gt;. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Völk,&lt;/span&gt; thanks to the group of german-trained intellectuals who thought up half the Latvian language in the 19th century, translates directly to the Latvian &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Tauta.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So Tautas Dziesma, or "folk song" implies something slightly different in Latvian than it does in English. It is not "theirs" but "ours." But the confusion doesn't end there. There is the issue, once again nauseatingly germanic, of how to use the genitive, and as a result there are two DIFFERENT expressions: &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Tautas Dziesma&lt;/span&gt; (two words) and &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Tautasdziesm&lt;/span&gt;a (one word). &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The two-word version is used to refer to all those choral arrangements which, according to the &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;New York Times &lt;/span&gt;correction, are not folk songs. It is also sometimes used to characterize newly composed songs which acquire so much cultural currency that they gain a common, "tautas" status. Several songs by the Latvian Schlager composers Raimonds Pauls, Zigmars Liepiņš, and Jānis Lūsēns have this status. Most of them earned it during the "singing revolution" period, when they stood for much more than their often benign lyrics implied.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Likewise, the term "tautas dziesma" doesn't require much discernment in terms of the provenance of "older" songs (i.e. those which come closer to being "folk songs" in the English sense). Many of the most popular songs of the Song Festival Repertoire (the repertoire represented by the film) are no more than two hundred years old, and have urban origins. Moreover, some have argued that &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Pūt Vējiņi&lt;/span&gt;, a "tautas dziesma" often referred to as Latvian's second national anthem, was actually composed by a professional musician in the early nineteenth century. But this isn't a concern for many people, because "tautas dziesma" has more to do with an acquired status - a popular cultural currency - than it does with authenticity or provenance. Indeed, the sense of "ownership" that is often cited as an essential component of the national song repertoire ("these songs belong to us, and no one else," as a conductor here put it) is linked not to the origins of the songs, many of which have German melodies, but to their function and the manner in which they are perceived. In this sense the "tautas dziesma" occupies the category of &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;phenomenal&lt;/span&gt;, in contrast to the &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;New York Times' noumenally&lt;/span&gt; defined "folk song."&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Meanwhile, "tautasdziesma" is a more or less direct translation of "folk song," and moreover it probably emerged in order to create a distinct category for this Western notion of a noumenally defined repertory. It is the tautasdziesmas, then, that the ethnomusicologists continue to run around the countryside collecting, and that the die-hard folklorists and "ethnographically informed" ensembles claim to be performing. The millions of &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;daina&lt;/span&gt; verses archived by Krisjans Barons in the early twentieth century also fall into this category. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The two different terms encompass two distinct conceptions of authenticity - one phenomenal, the other noumenal. In this sense, their parallel existence is really f-ing interesting. But I have to go for a run now or my entire body will atrophy into tautas lard, so I will leave all further analysis up to the imaginations of the aforementioned three people reading this.&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-2458879568057572900?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/2458879568057572900/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=2458879568057572900' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/2458879568057572900'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/2458879568057572900'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/04/below-was-posted-at-bottom-of-recent.html' title='folk, völk, and tauta'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-1951235236787075189</id><published>2008-03-27T06:05:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2008-03-27T06:34:56.266-07:00</updated><title type='text'>The Denial of Depth</title><content type='html'>Depth. Unfortunately I forgot to bring a copy of Raymond Williams’s &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;&lt;a href="http://books.google.com/books?ei=OZzrR6nlDouOywSPkPGYAw&amp;amp;id=4XkYAAAAIAAJ&amp;amp;dq=keywords&amp;amp;q=depth&amp;amp;pgis=1"&gt;Keywords&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt; to Riga, but it must be in there. If one of the three people who will read this has a copy, look it up for me.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It’s a one-word platitude, the most efficient textual gateway to the many spatial metaphors that have allowed so much of nineteenth-century Germanic idealism to maintain its grip on the categories through which we think about art in 2008.  And it played a predictably prominent role in David Hajdu’s recent review for the &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.tnr.com/"&gt;New Republic&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt; of a recent collaboration by Philip Glass and Leonard Cohen.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I should lay may cards on the table: I am responding to Hajdu’s analysis, not his opinions, but the work he reviews, entitled &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Book of Longing&lt;/span&gt;, impressed the hell out of me when I saw it performed at the Barbican in London this Fall. To invoke another one-word platitude, I would even say I was &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;moved&lt;/span&gt; by the performance, at least in the sense that by the end of the first hour I felt possessed by an understanding I couldn’t articulate. Perhaps it was a dose of that aural sublime that musical minimalism is always so successful at invoking in performance, in which case I imagine I’m guilty of the usual critical lapse that comes over me when I listen. Perhaps it had something to do with frustrated expectations - I was sure going into the concert that the piece would be garbage. But there was something else, too; an excess; and Hajdu’s review got my hermeneutic gears turning.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’ll quote Hajdu extensively, to give a sense of the crux of his criticism:&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“The Cohen-Robinson song “A Thousand Kisses Deep” [referring to a previous song with the same lyrics] is a wafting R&amp;amp;B lament – hypnotic, though diminished a bit by the recording’s Euro-pop synths and cheesy programmed drums. The Glass setting of the same lyrics, “You Came to Me This Morning,” is rigid and strident when it should be lyrical; the chords jerk about awkwardly, and the melody follows, too closely, in kind. At more than ten minutes in length, the song, like much of Glass’s music, seems endless  - a thousand kisses long, but skin deep.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“…there are larger problems with this music, and they are the enduring vexations of Philip Glass’s work: its glibness, its mechanical character, its seeming arbitrariness. The music is, on the whole, frigid. It does not evoke or stir much feeling, and this is a failure close to sin in work connected to Leonard Cohen.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“…The singers Glass employs on Book of Longing scarcely help. Glass composed the melodies to fall in the lower parts of each singer’s register, an approach sometimes used to discourage concert artists from over-singing. Yet the four here all over-sing, articulating the lyrics with a formality and a theatricality wholly inappropriate to Cohen’s casual, intimate language. The effect is comical, sadly…”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The reason I found this review so stimulating is that I agree with all of Hajdu’s characterizations, and yet find them all salutary. In his disavowal of the piece he sums up many of the reasons that, both in the immanence of listening and upon critical reflection, I find it fabulous.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;For Hajdu, Glass’s composition is a betrayal. It renders intensely emotional lyrics “skin deep,” robbing them of their “feeling.” The trope here, used most frequently in criticisms of cover songs or re-adaptations of lyrics, is familiar enough, especially in responses to Glass – a square, cold-hearted intellectual robs an “artist” of the ineffable humanity of his work. Performative authenticity is reduced to flat, emotionless monotone in a misanthropic intervention that blithely ignores everything “natural” about the original.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It’s a critical trope that has kept a lot of popular music critics employed over the years. These self-appointed defenders of “soul” will reject almost any critical intervention into the “authentic” emotionality of an original, of a “true artist,” with little concern for the disingenuous spirit in which these categories might be deployed. (Culture Industry, anyone?)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’ll try a different reading.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This piece was about the depthlessness of “depth.” It was moving because it so thoroughly negated the disingenuous emotionality – the “soul,” perhaps – that conventionally makes canned music seem “deep.” In this negation, however, it affirmed something we might not have noticed before about Leonard Cohen – namely, that his utter inability to carry a tune, and his producers’ apparent fascination with dated synthesizers and drum machines (a fascination Glass shares), lend an almost sultry apathy, or at least ambivalence, to his delivery. We hear it in the recordings of Cohen’s voice that pop up throughout the piece. The chintzy rhyming couplets, to use Cohen’s own words, “sink like rocks” in his gravelly cadence, which straddles the mythic personae of tortured poet and seasoned nihilist – Coleridge and Kafka, Otis Redding and Frank Zappa. But which way do they sink? To the depths of meaninglessness? Of Depression? Of “profundity”? Most likely the latter – the chintzy rhyming couplets sink like rocks to the depths of profundity.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In other words,&lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt; Book of Longing&lt;/span&gt; negates itself at every turn, leaving the listener with a flatness, an excess of nothingness, a barrage of platitudes. It’s Glass at his very best, and no, I’m not reading with or against the grain here. There is no grain. Nor is there an author.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;For Cohen, meanwhile, it highlights something we might not have seen before: like Bob Dylan at his most “soulful” and overwrought, his music gives us room to question the efficacy and authenticity of melodrama even as it spins it out ad nauseum. Both Cohen and Dylan are unquestionably full of shit in the must salutary way, and we are all the richer for it. Glass, meanwhile, continues to inhabit a shit-filled persona of his own, disallowing all but the most depraved and absurd of idealist readings.&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-1951235236787075189?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/1951235236787075189/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=1951235236787075189' title='6 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/1951235236787075189'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/1951235236787075189'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/03/denial-of-depth.html' title='&lt;a href=&quot;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Denial_of_Death&quot;&gt;The Denial of Depth&lt;/a&gt;'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>6</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-5816802954709514188</id><published>2008-02-26T04:26:00.001-08:00</published><updated>2008-02-26T04:29:02.104-08:00</updated><title type='text'></title><content type='html'>&lt;a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://millionreasonswhylatviaisthebestcountryintheworld.com/bildes/5074.jpg"&gt;&lt;img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px;" src="http://millionreasonswhylatviaisthebestcountryintheworld.com/bildes/5074.jpg" border="0" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-5816802954709514188?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/5816802954709514188/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=5816802954709514188' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/5816802954709514188'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/5816802954709514188'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/02/httpmillionreasonswhylatviaisthebestcou.html' title=''/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-2256880373533811349</id><published>2008-02-24T06:43:00.001-08:00</published><updated>2008-02-24T06:43:27.150-08:00</updated><title type='text'>Is China the new Latvia?</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;“…The closing in the summer of 1988 of most resort beaches in Jurmala [due to acute water pollution caused by runoff from a paper factory in Sloka], the incredible bureaucratic bungling of the construction of even minimal purification devices for Riga, and the general lack of progress in solving acute air and water contamination problems throughout the republic served as powerful testimonies that the Soviet system did not work.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Juris Dreifelds, Latvia in Transition. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1996.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I came to Riga under the impression that the folklore revival movement was the first manifestation of Latvia’s “Third National Awakening” in the 1980s, but I have since learned that the first group to directly challenge the Soviet regime was in fact an environmental activism group, the &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;VAK&lt;/span&gt;. As it turns out, by the 1980s the effects of fifty years of unchecked large-scale industrialization, coupled with an institutionalized apathy towards the human costs of so-called “progress,” had created a nearly catastrophic environmental situation around the Gulf of Riga.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Soviet authorities provided their opponents with ample evidence of historical incompetence. But a proposed dam on the Daugava river, slated for construction in 1986, pushed the complacency of a repressed population to the breaking point. The dam, meant to produce electricity to be exported to other Soviet republics, would have utterly transformed Latvia’s geographical landscape and quite possibly caused the erosion and depletion of a huge amount of productive farmland. Further, by decreasing the flow of the river it would have exacerbated water pollution problems already posing grave health risks to populations along the river, including in densely populated Riga neighborhoods. It was a classic Soviet industrial project, replete with an exaggerated scale, a total disregard for rational planning, and a widespread ignorance among administrators to the problems involved.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It also struck a chord with a nascent upsurge in nationalistic sentiment. The subject of dozens of well-known folksongs (and perhaps thousands of lesser known Dainas) and one of the central icons of Latvian mythology, the “Mighty Daugava” was as powerful a symbol of Latvian history and identity as any. The proposed dam would forever transform this ancient national symbol, potentially decreasing its majestic expanse in Riga to a trickle.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The dam project became a rallying cry for the &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;VAK&lt;/span&gt;, who staged one of the first public protests against the Soviet regime since the occupation began in 1940, and initiated a very public letter-writing campaign which, with the cooperation of a newly liberalized local media (thanks to Gorbachev’s &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Glasnost&lt;/span&gt;), publicized the potentially catastrophic effects of the dam, and its potential to dramatically transform the Latvian landscape. Soon, against all odds, a widespread popular opposition developed, and within a few months, after being forced to come to terms with the sheer fatuousness of their own project and the extent of the popular opposition to it, the authorities capitulated.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Latvian environmental movement begs further analysis, and unfortunately it is way outside the bounds of what I came here to study. But it is also much more directly relevant to contemporary global issues than any musical topic, and so I can’t resist riffing on it a bit.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;One analogy that comes to mind would have us consider Latvia’s environmentalist political vanguard in the context of that other pseudo-communist state. The one that is supposed to be different…&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;China, to its great fortune, has followed its own path to a reformed totalitarianism, abstaining from many of the most ludicrous and mediocre extremes of its former Soviet neighbor. But it undoubtedly shares the Soviets’ proactive disregard for the environmental and human effects of large-scale industrialization. Indeed, China is no stranger to grandiose dam projects, nor are the Chinese strangers to the health consequences of cheap growth.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And it’s not as though China lacks an environmental opposition. Some of the most outspoken critics of Chinese government projects in the past few years of moderate liberalization have claimed environmental and health impacts as a primary grievance. But little seems to be changing on a large scale.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Perhaps not for long, though. Sociologists and political theorists (Castells comes to mind) have demonstrated environmental concerns, if they are real and palpable enough, to be one of the most effective means of framing broader social issues and organizing large-scale political resistance. Latvia, it turns out, provides ample evidence for this. It was not the lack of civil liberties or a repressed nationalism that incited those first brave protesters to take action. It was, in a sense, not a threat to any of the abstractions that the Soviet system disallowed. Rather, it was a threat to everything physical about the nation – its land, its people. The broad and uncontrollable threat to concrete places and people made the threat to the national abstraction felt in a real enough way to incite political action, even at a grave risk.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Granted, I suppose none of this could or would have happened under Stalinism. But China is not Stalinist. While the internet is still firewallled and freedom of political opposition is still held tightly in check, the opening up of the economy and the ensuing social change have wrought their own kind of &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Glasnost&lt;/span&gt;. The big question, as far as I can tell from my naive vantage point, is  whether political reform will continue on a painfully gradual track, whether capitalism will be built without any substantive political form, or whether somehow all this change without &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;change&lt;/span&gt; will reach a breaking point.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This summer, athletes, reporters, and tourists from around the world will arrive in Beijing to glistening new multi-billion-dollar facilities, smiling faces from a well-trained, multilingual service sector, tours of spectacular development projects, and a thick brown haze permeating everything. Some athletes will struggle to breathe on international television. The Chinese government will have to own up to the equivalent of all those closed beaches in Jūrmala in the mid-80s, but on a much larger scale. They will have to answer for egregious failures to plan for the most basic well-being of cities and their populations.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Environmental disasters, whether fast and dramatic (Chernobyl) or painfully prolonged (the fifty year destruction of the Gulf of Riga), have set strong precedents for the political destabilization of repressive regimes. I cannot help but sense (despite the many obvious differences) that when heard in the context of the environmental roots of Latvia’s "third awakening," the ticking of the Chinese time bomb seems a bit louder.&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-2256880373533811349?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/2256880373533811349/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=2256880373533811349' title='1 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/2256880373533811349'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/2256880373533811349'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/02/is-china-new-latvia.html' title='Is China the new Latvia?'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>1</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-3223662081247466953</id><published>2008-02-03T04:52:00.000-08:00</published><updated>2008-02-03T04:55:38.071-08:00</updated><title type='text'>If it can be moved, it is everywhere...</title><content type='html'>One thing I have noticed again and again living and traveling abroad this year is the obsolescence of the following clichéd proto-exchange:&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;    “Oh, you’re going to Belgium!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;    “Yeah, for a few days. Mostly business but I’m hoping to do some shopping, too.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;    “Well bring me back some chocolate, and make sure you eat a waffle and drink some Duvel.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The fact is that very little exists anywhere in Europe, and almost anywhere else (at least counting the places I’ve visited recently) that can’t be gotten almost everywhere else. Want Belgian chocolate? Just go to the chocolatier at the nearest shopping mall. It turns out if you ask a Belgian what their favorite chocolate is they are likely to say “Godiva.” Want a Belgian waffle? Well, of course you don’t have to be in Brussels for that. You can get a machine at Target, find a recipe online and make your own. And as for beer, there are 99 trappist varieties on tap at one of my favorite bars in Greenwich Village, and even Riga now has its own Belgian bar (and no, I’m not talking about the ubiquitous Stella Pub).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I suppose this is not entirely new. Traditional foods and of course beers have been imported for a long time. But part of me wonders whether the idea of an ineffable particularity of place, at least in terms of the products that can be consumed (it will be hard to build a Louvre in every city, but damned if Dubai isn’t trying), has reached its breaking point. Simply put: what can you buy or eat anywhere in the world that you can’t also buy or eat somewhere in New York or London? &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The easiest way to discover this is to travel somewhere and try to find good gifts to bring home. Even handmade crafts can be bought at internationally focused boutiques in the US and Europe. What’s the point of bringing back chocolate or candy when every variety can be bought at home? And no, nobody quite does cassoulet like a brasserie in Toulouse, but my favorite French place in Baltimore comes close.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If the very idea of regionality has not yet curdled, the concept of the “regional speciality” as something to be experienced only in a particular place certainly has. The spaces of consumption in Western countries are coming closer and closer to resemble the fantasyland of Epcot Center, where every commodifiable world culture is packaged into its own shopping and eating pavilion, allowing the visitor to stroll from a Tokyo fish market to a Parisian bistro in a matter of minutes. That Eiffel Tower at the chintzy Las Vegas casino-hotel might look and feel fake, but Joël Robuchon’s food most likely does not, nor does the Pouilly-Fuisse sitting in a temperature-controlled cellar beneath the Nevada desert. If it can be moved, it’s everywhere.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;One wonders when the marketers will team up and create a backlash, exporting certain items but restricting others in order to extract a monopoly rent (Marxist jargon for the price premium that comes from “authenticity” and “singularity”) from their exclusive sale in the “country of origin.” At least maybe then there will be SOMETHING worth bringing home from Belgium.&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-3223662081247466953?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/3223662081247466953/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=3223662081247466953' title='1 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/3223662081247466953'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/3223662081247466953'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2008/02/if-it-can-be-moved-it-is-everywhere.html' title='If it can be moved, it is everywhere...'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>1</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-2620992153944771482</id><published>2007-12-11T17:43:00.000-08:00</published><updated>2008-03-27T08:30:12.315-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Kim Jong Ill and Zarin Mehta, united in music's most tired alibi</title><content type='html'>The words “music” and “politics” have been printed much closer together than usual this week, but not without the usual hand-wringing. The New York Philharmonic, we are told, will travel to North Korea for 48 hours during a concert tour of Asia in February. The New York Times published a &lt;a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/12/arts/music/12orch.html"&gt;summary&lt;/a&gt; of the press conference at which the visit was announced, held jointly between Zarin Mehta, the orchestra’s president, and Pak Gil Yon, North Korea’s highest ranking diplomat in the United States. Both men seemed simultaneously to emphasize and downplay the political significance of the event, in a sense playing directly into each other’s hand. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Apparently Mr. Pak met with the orchestra management before the conference and insisted that questions about North Korea’s nuclear program be off-limits, arguing that “otherwise the atmosphere will be politicized.” The statement is of course absurd – how could the atmosphere not be politicized, nukes or no? &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Of course one can expect comments of this ilk from the mouthpiece of a totalitarian regime – Kim Jong Ill’s reign has always depended upon a cynical rejection of reality and all the messiness it entails. Indeed, Hannah Arendt’s chilling assessment of the Soviet Union still rings true for one of its few remaining &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;heirs-apparent&lt;/span&gt;: “there is no secret training school in Soviet Russia which gives out authentic facts about life abroad – but simply a general training in supreme contempt for all facts and all reality… It is this freedom from the content off their own ideologies which characterizes the highest rank of the totalitarian hierarchy.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In the process of sidestepping the radioactive elephant in the room of any press conference involving the North Korean government, Pak also managed to subtly assert a much more significant claim: neither this conference nor the concert it has been held to announce will be political. Music, that “universal language,” is above the fray of nuclear weapons and human rights violations. As Schopenhauer put it (in one of Richard Taruskin’s favorite quotations), the arts "float idly above...[still looking for quotation]". Instrumental music, being nonrepresentational and thus inherently abstract, seemed to many eighteenth and nineteenth century thinkers to be the most autonomous of the arts, the most removed from the dirtiness of everyday life, the closest to that innocent, virtuous realm to which the artist aspires. As Taruskin and many others have made clear, this argument’s historical deployment has been one of the great tragic ironies of modern music history: it is a political statement to say that something is not political. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Of course it’s easy enough to doubt the political innocence of Mr. Kim’s intentions in bringing this orchestral monster of the Western cultural elite to Pyongyang. But what about the Philharmonic? &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Zarin Mehta, the orchestra’s manager, seems to agree wholeheartedly with Pak and Schopenhauer: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;"We only play great music. We don't think about politics." &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Mehta even goes out of his way to poke fun at one of the few twentieth century composers who had the guts to engage then-contemporary politics in his music (albeit in opera, a genre decidedly exempt from the autonomy-claims of instrumental music): “Did you want us to play 'Chairman Mao dances?” This is not about politics, it’s about art. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I do not need to summarize Taruskin’s recent arguments about the inherent fallacy in such a position, and the many historical injustices it has wrought, to point out its most obvious fault: Mehta is conceding the utter pointlessness of the Orchestra’s visit. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Of course he seems to back off from his own assertion of the separation of the aesthetic and the political when he suggests that the goal of the visit is to help “open the country.” (Open it to what? one might ask – the culturally decaying elite of Western modernism? Indeed, the &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Times’&lt;/span&gt; references to trips by American Orchestras to the Soviet Union underline the anachronism of both Kim Jong Ill himself and the Philharmonic’s visit) But the suggestion that the music being played, including the national anthems of both nations, will be empty of political content, is tantamount to arguing that a press conference in New York shared by a leading American cultural figure and North Korea’s highest ranking American diplomat will not be politicized.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Regardless of the inevitable posturing and hand-wringing, I suppose it can’t hurt for the Philharmonic to make this visit. I do not share the opinion that it will come as an implicit endorsement for Kim Jong Ill (an earlier article quoted Lawrence Kramer calling it a “propaganda coup”). If anything, like Khrushchev’s thaw, it will only serve to underline to the backwardness of North Korea’s society to at least a few of its citizens, insulated as they are from the world beyond their borders. Music can be deployed to political ends, and even to good ones, despite the contrary claims of its supporters. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Still, I think it is worth pointing out the resurgence of an irony that desperately needs to be put to bed: must the political deployment of music, like that of a Stalinist decree, always be accompanied by a grandiose assertion of music’s inherent political innocence? Is the hazy idealism that has always accompanied Classical instrumental music still necessary for its legitimacy? If so, all those idealists-cum-pessimists banging the death knolls of American classical music may be on to something. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Mehta had quite a podium. He stood, awkwardly, alongside a diplomat from a country known to have forced millions of its own inhabitants into starvation while its paranoid, eccentric misanthrope of a leader listened to Madonna and ate Kentucky Fried Chicken smuggled from Moscow. Perhaps the invitation was his to lose, but the opportunity to actually say something was his to lose as well, and he happily tossed it aside as a bit of banal political bickering far beneath him. This, after all, was about Music, a realm of innocence and beauty not to be troubled with threats of starvation and nuclear holocaust. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;One can only hope the musicians themselves, who will lead master-classes and visit local schools, will not hold such despicable delusions about their art. One can also hope that the orchestra’s coming visit will open up a much-needed forum for discussion of music’s political content, as all of us try to come to terms with the many political manifestations that this “apolitical” concert, and even the music performed on it, will have.&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-2620992153944771482?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/2620992153944771482/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=2620992153944771482' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/2620992153944771482'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/2620992153944771482'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2007/12/kim-jong-ill-and-zarin-mehta-united-in.html' title='Kim Jong Ill and Zarin Mehta, united in music&apos;s most tired alibi'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-8261771620983183548</id><published>2007-11-24T13:04:00.000-08:00</published><updated>2007-11-24T13:18:30.984-08:00</updated><category scheme='http://www.blogger.com/atom/ns#' term='steals'/><category scheme='http://www.blogger.com/atom/ns#' term='barold'/><category scheme='http://www.blogger.com/atom/ns#' term='latvia'/><category scheme='http://www.blogger.com/atom/ns#' term='robbery'/><title type='text'>The "Steals" Part</title><content type='html'>"Steals" is what Inga, my landlady, calls the people who broke into my apartment while I was sleeping and stole my half-functional digital camera, ipod, and wallet. No, this was not THAT big a deal, and while yes, it was frustrating, I am forcing myself to maintain a positive and unfazed attitude about it, which as you can see may be a vain attempt. But really, I mean, it could be worse, right? I'm still typing into the same computer, using the same passport and listening to music through the same headphones. Three out of six accessories. Not so bad.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The problem was that when I arrived home with my hands full of groceries, including two of the 5-liter water jugs that are the ubiquitous lifeblood of this city, I really had to pee. And while I was peeing I forgot all about the fact that I had not locked the door. I remembered the door only the next morning, when I realized that several things were missing from my desk. Which is when I realized that "steals" had snuck into my apartment while I was sleeping and taken these things. Bummer.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In case you care, I just realized that there is an elegant circularity to this story - you see, I was peeing out water I had drunk from a 5-liter jug early that morning. The fact that it was the last water in that jug meant that I needed a new jug, which was precisely the jug I carried into the apartment when I suddenly desperately had to evacuate the water from the old jug. If I hadn't drunk the water from the old jug, I would have needed neither to pee nor to carry the new jug, and chances are I would have locked the door like usual and woken up the next day with a camera, ipod, and wallet sitting on my desk where I had left them. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This is a long and fiction-free attempt to explain why there are no pictures on my blog. The other excuse has to do with the unfathomably high cost of electronics in Latvia, which may in fact have something to do with the persistence of whichever steals were checking nightly to see if my door was locked. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;BUT, I get to go to BERLIN tomorrow, and there, against all good sense (considering the euro-dollar exchange rate), I am dead set on buying a camera. I know, I know, edge of your seats...&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-8261771620983183548?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/8261771620983183548/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=8261771620983183548' title='1 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/8261771620983183548'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/8261771620983183548'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2007/11/steals-part.html' title='The &quot;Steals&quot; Part'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>1</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4499902231966610620.post-2979653183009499404</id><published>2007-11-08T03:54:00.000-08:00</published><updated>2007-11-08T04:16:37.556-08:00</updated><title type='text'>Rain, Steals, Stories</title><content type='html'>Almost a month into my Latvian sojurn, I'm sitting in a half-lit apartment, suddenly ipodless (more on that in a moment), finishing Modris Ecksteins' disorienting and decentering history and memoir "Walking Since Daybreak." It's one of those moments where writing feels like the thing to do, and I suppose it is a good moment to start my first-ever blog.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Which, such as it is, requires at lest a brief struggle with the concept of 'blog' and its more productive offspring, 'blogging...' Am I writing this for myself or someone else? Do people read these things? Why? Is it an expedient way to avoid sending mass emails, or a different endeavor entirely? Am I overthinking this? Course I am. The idea of a public journal is a difficult one to grasp, though. I suppose it isn't meant to replace the private journal, but perhaps to provide a venue for some of the contents of that journal to be made public. After all, not everything one writes down in one's little black book is a dark and intimate secret. Half of it is just schlock that pops into one's head after a concert or on the tram. But is any of that schlock really worth sharing with the world? The above digression is an ideal example. Do you really care? Further, am I writing this for myself, or for my projected audience, anxious as I must be on some level to impress them with the quality and candor of this, Whit's first-ever blog. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And about that projected audience. Because of course it is projected. If a blog is written on the internet, and no one is there to read it, is it really there? Anyway enough of this silliness. Here it is, for better or worse. I hope you'll email me for a more personalized take on these things. But in the mean time, here they are, gracefully cast in white-on-blue Helvetica.&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4499902231966610620-2979653183009499404?l=rigalia.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/feeds/2979653183009499404/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4499902231966610620&amp;postID=2979653183009499404' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/2979653183009499404'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/4499902231966610620/posts/default/2979653183009499404'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://rigalia.blogspot.com/2007/11/rain-steals-stories.html' title='Rain, Steals, Stories'/><author><name>Whit Bernard</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry></feed>
