2016-11-29

Lone wolf (Ганцаардсан чоно)

The Facebook generation seems to have generated a world of people with friendly and cheery social connections. But some may remember an older, darker world that celebrated angst and anomie as expressions of individual authenticity.  This bear certainly understands and identifiers that loner's world more easily.


But even the lone wolf sometimes has to let out a howl.  

2016-11-23

Make Mongolia Great Again

So this is making the rounds...perhaps inspired by another authoritarian attaining power.

https://mobile.twitter.com/asiapundits/status/723781256148836352
It is just fascinating that although the Mongol empire was the largest ever, there are today only a population of just over 3 million in Mongolia.  They do punch above their weight in terms of impact.  Yes, the greater Mongolsphere is somewhat larger, but not in orders of magnitude.  It is hard to grapple with the actual population density, but it is possible. Just for comparison, here are the 30 states or territories of the US that are larger than Mongolia in population.

  • Iowa = 1 Mongolia
  • Connecticut > 1 Mongolia
  • Oklahoma > 1 Mongolia
  • Oregon > 1 Mongolia
  • Kentucky > 1 Mongolia
  • Louisiana > 1 Mongolia
  • Alabama > 1 Mongolia
  • South Carolina > 1 Mongolia
  • Colorado > 1 Mongolia
  • Minnesota > 1 Mongolia
  • Wisconsin > 1 Mongolia
  • Maryland = 2 Mongolias
  • Missouri > 2 Mongolias
  • Tennessee > 2 Mongolias
  • Indiana > 2 Mongolias
  • Massachusetts > 2 Mongolias
  • Arizona > 2 Mongolias
  • Washington > 2 Mongolias
  • Virginia > 2 Mongolias
  • New Jersey = 3 Mongolias (almost)
  • Michigan > 3 Mongolias
  • North Carolina > 3 Mongolias
  • Georgia > 3 Mongolias
  • Ohio > 3 Mongolias
  • Pennsylvania > 4 Mongolias
  • Illinois > 4 Mongolias
  • New York > 6 Mongolias
  • Florida > 6 Mongolias
  • Texas > 9 Mongolias
  • California = 13 Mongolias
And let's go ahead and do a selected international comparison while we're at it.  Uruguay is just slighter larger and Armenia just slightly smaller than Mongolia in population, and it is possible that some people have at least heard of those countries.  Bigger than Mongolia are:
  • New Zealand > 1 Mongolia
  • Ireland > 1 Mongolia
  • Norway > 1 Mongolia
  • Finland = 2 Mongolias (well, close)
  • Singapore = 2 Mongolias (also close)
  • Kyrgyzstan = 2 Mongolias
  • Hong Kong > 2 Mongolias
  • Switzerland > 2 Mongolias
  • Austria = 3 Mongolias (almost)
  • Netherlands > 5 Mongolias
  • Kazakhstan = 6 Mongolias (almost)
  • Australia = 6 Mongolias
  • Uzbekistan = 10 Mongolias
  • Canada = 12 Mongolias
  • South Korea = 17 Mongolias
  • Italy = 20 Mongolias
  • France = 22 Mongolias
  • Turkey = 26 Mongolias
  • Japan = 42 Mongolias
  • Russia = 48 Mongolias
  • Indonesia = 86 Mongolias
  • United States = 108 Mongolias
Let's not even compute the numbers for India and China - too scary.  Still it is intriguing that Mongolia has a reputation far beyond its population size, especially compared to a country like Uzbekistan, that few have ever heard of.  A good argument for reducing population density.

2016-11-22

Research

Old enough to know better, but it is still just a matter of manipulating the symbols. That creates the illusion of life.




2016-11-19

Talk of the Town

It is away from the usual trend of thoughts on this blog, but it seems like an appropriate moment to discuss pioneering female guitarists.  Actually, going to discuss just one, Chrissie Hynde, this bear's second favorite female guitarist according to the latest published rankings.
[As an aside, this bear almost always favors the Telecaster among electric guitars.  A crisp, biting, even harsh sound is preferable to a fat, thick, smooth one.]

The slick and practiced world of Kpop can create innumerable seductive and addictive sounds, but true individual creativity can triumph over even such a mighty machine.  Hynde and the Pretenders rode the wave of opportunity to new kinds of music and sounds with the arrival of punk.  Punk itself opened up rock music to women without requiring them to behave themselves. 

Many interesting female artists [male too], from Patti Smith on down, found their audience at the time.  Not to belittle them, but Hynde was always operating on a higher dimension of crushing sound, musicality, and lyricism, and therefore she outlasted all of the others that were tied to brief musical fads.

Hynde had to fight hard to win acceptance as the front-woman of a pure rock and roll band.  After many false starts, she formed her band the Pretenders when she was 27. Wikipedia has most of the relevant background material.

Three exemplar tracks:
  • Message of Love - No other song creates as much rhythmic intensity out of the silences between notes.  Nice lyrics too.  "We are all of us in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars" fits so well in this song that this bear took 30 years to learn that this is quote from Oscar Wilde.
  • Kid There had been so many great hard-rocking Pretenders tracks that this "soft" sound was a surprise. But Hynde cared more about making great music than fitting any mold.  What a fantastic result!
  • Talk of the Town  Gorgeously fluid buildup and drive to the unforgettable chorus.  The lyrics were always incomprehensible to me until the internet was available to explain them, but they are actually great too.

As an inexperienced kid, you tend to think that such music is very good, but just a bit better than the other music that is floating around.  But as the years pass, you gain a better appreciation that unique talents are just that, and don't come around again in better versions.  So the fans just have to hope that they are composing, playing, and recording as much as possible for posterity.

Unlike Mick Jones in the Library, Chrissie remains glamorous and hard-rocking to this day.
Hynde in 2016, age 65
Update, just to circle this back around to Mongolia...


2016-11-17

Just because...

"Just because you like my stuff doesn't mean I owe you anything" ---Bob Dylan


So Mr. Dylan is in the news for being rude again by not showing up at the Nobel Awards ceremony after first refusing to acknowledge the award for a couple of weeks.  The outright refusal of the award by the likes of Sartre

by Thierry Ehrmann
seems like a classier move in many ways.  But it still raises the issue in the Dylan quote above.  The artist creates.  Many artists create in a symbiotic relationship with their audiences, seeking to please and being fed and sustained by the approval of those audiences. Other artists recognize on some level the necessity or practicality of catering to public opinion in some form.  But, providing the artist can ignore or withstand the reaction of the commentariat, it is perfectly within their rights to adopt a Dylanesque pose --- pose seems the right word in Dylan's case --- towards the artist's public.  It just is what it is.  And sometimes the artist just needs to get busy doing what they have to do to create and stuff the rest.

For an intriguing collection of photos, see Surzhana Radnaeva's www.surzhana.com.

2016-11-08

Stormy Weather Ahead


[without commentary]



Автор: Kikuchi Yoosai / (of the reproduction) Tokyo National Museum - Dschingis Khan und seine Erben (exhibition catalogue), München 2005, p. 331, Общественное достояние, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4201190

2016-11-06

A Flawless Woman


art by narare

"I have finally realized how rarely you will find a flawless woman, one who is simply perfect. No doubt there are many who seem quite promising, write a flowing hand, give you back a perfectly acceptable poem, and all in all do credit enough to the rank they have to uphold, but you know, if you insist on any particular quality, you seldom find one who will do. Each one is all too pleased with her own accomplishments, runs others down, and so on. While a girl is under the eye of her adoring parents and living a sheltered life is bright with future promise, it seems men have only to hear of some little talent of hers to be attracted. As long as she is pretty and innocent, and young enough to have nothing else on her mind, she may well put her heart into learning a pastime that she has seen others enjoy, and in fact she may become quite good at it. And when those who know her disguise her weaknesses and advertise whatever passable qualities she may have so as to present them in the best light, how could anyone think ill of her, having no reason to suspect her of being other than she seems? But when you look further to see whether it is all true, I am sure you can only end up disappointed."

Murasaki Shikubu, The Tale of Genji, Royall Tyler translation