2017-11-07

Bounded atmospheres

Enjoying the minimalist geometry of this image by Surzhana Radnaeva on my wall.
Photo by SURZHÅNA ÅRT, all rights reserved. Reprinted here by permission of the artist.

At the risk of overexplaining things, I like to have this print in my workspace because I see it as a metaphor for the creative process.  There is an ambiguous mass of undifferentiated sensation around us, which we seek to order and control by drawing boundaries.  But those boundaries are artificial, and we can see through that artifice.  They are imperfect, with gaps, and they are mobile and can be easily repositioned.  So when I look at this image, I can contemplate where I want my own boundaries to be, in order to create the harmony and resonance that I seek to evoke.

2017-11-04

Harmogu unlocked my musical brain


Sometimes things change you in unexpected ways.  I have been waiting for this phenomenon to subside, but after 21 months it shows no sign of abating.  Not only has Harmogu's music become my favorite in the world and soaked into my being, but it has also had a more far-reaching effect.
All music has come alive to me in a way that it had not for many years.  This occurs not only for the classical 70s/80s music that I sometimes blog about, but it is actually everywhere, including many new discoveries.  The perpetual soundtrack in my head that used to run when I was a teenager is back, but now it is linked with words and other creative activity.  My brain seems more flexible and mutable, able to elastically react in novel ways, because dormant regions have been reactivated.  My Weltanschauung has altered too. So, I constantly sing songs of my own invention now, and I am so happy about that. 
Harmogu


2017-09-20

Fool in the Rain

Memory is a strange creature that emerges and recedes from darkness as it pleases.  I am sure neuroscientists have a more impressive explanation than this, but synapses that lay unfired and unconnected for decades reawakened in the past week to remind me of a past, early love --- or better to say infatuation.  At one time this song:
meant the world to me. Now the abstract sensation of the song is more real to me than any "actual" memories, and so I am issuing a small commemoration of that here.

2017-08-05

A choice is made

When Yisugei saw [Dei Secen's] daughter, he saw a girl who had light in her face, who had fire in her eyes.  He was pleased with her...

When Yisugei requested his daughter for Temujin, Dei Secen said, "If I gave her away after much asking on your part, you would respect me; if I gave her away without much asking, you would despise me.  But the fate of a girl is not to grow old in the family in which she has been born."

The Secret History of the Mongols,  Igor de Rachewiltz translation.


2017-07-16

Closing in on the elusive kitsune

Just a July update to report that kitsune researches are continuing.  Although kitsune are difficult to track and approach, with patience it is possible to get close to them for observation purposes.  It appears this cycle is coming to a close, and that once all of the information has been gathered, it will be time to write the report describing the kitsune.

symbolic kitsune

2017-06-21

The Lake

Kawabata's The Lake is the last of his works on my reading list.  The italicized text are a couple of passages from the first few pages of the book.

"You have a lovely voice, you know."
"Voice?"
"Yes. It lingers on even after you've stopped speaking. I wish it would go on forever. It feels as though something gentle and delicate were sinking through my inner ear into the core of my brain.  Really, it would make even the most hardened criminal as meek as a lamb."
"Oh? I'm sure it's dreadfully coy and girlish."
"Not coy. It's incredibly sweet. It's got something sad and something tender, and at the same time it's fresh and open. It's different from a singer's voice. Are you in love?"
"No. It would be nice if I were."

"You know it would be almost a crime to feel uncomfortable listening to your voice."
The girl suddenly stopped working.
"When I hear your voice, everything else disappears. I know it sounds a bit farfetched, but a voice can't be chased or caught, can it? I suppose it's like the flow of time or life. No, it needn't be."

Those are touchstones for a certain kind of writing.  They are just beyond the boundaries of good taste, and so represent another kind of marker to signal a necessary turn in the writing process.

While this part of the novel has its interests, unfortunately, from this point forward in the novel, everything turns sour, and quite creepy.  In the same way that I am unable to "forget" that Lolita is a paean to child molestation, whatever else may be layered into it, with The Lake, the glorification of the stalker's thought processes is just too much.  The balance that characterized many of Kawabata's other works is gone, and with it enjoyment yields to ick.  House of the Sleeping Beauties was also undeniably perverted, but its perversions seemed to be necessary aids to posing challenging questions. I didn't see that justification in The Lake at all.

The soundless video below seems to be an apt metaphor for the current state of Kawabataism.  Or to quote Morrissey, "you know who it is, but you don't like what it means."



2017-06-15

Beauty and Sadness

from the film version of Beauty and Sadness

[What follows are all quotes from the English translation of Yasunari Kawabata's Beauty and Sadness.  I am putting this out there as a marker and a goal post so that I can try to exceed this ... in dreaming.]

But what, for example, was the relation between the Otoko in his novel and the real Otoko? It was hard to say.
Of all his novels, the one that had had the longest life, and was still widely read, was the one that told the story of his love affair with her.  The publication of that novel had caused her further injury, eventually turning the eyes of the curious on her.  Yet why had she now, decades later, gained the affection of so many readers?
Perhaps one should say that the Otoko in his novel, rather than the girl who was the model for the character, had gained the affection of his readers.  It was not Otoko's own story, it was something he had written.  He had added imaginative and fictional touches of his own, and a certain idealization.  Leaving that aside, who could say which was the real Otoko -- the one he had described, or the one she might have created in telling her own story?
Still, the girl in his novel was Otoko.  The novel could not have existed without their love affair.  And it was because of her that it continued to be so widely read.  If he had never met her he would never have known such a love.  To find a love like that, at thirty, might be taken as good luck or bad, he could not say which, but there was no doubt that it had given him a fortunate debut as an author.

she once startled him by saying "You're the kind who's always worrying about what other people think, aren't you.  You ought to be bolder."  
"It's everything -- you ought to be more yourself."

Two years after he parted from her the novel was published.

"I ought to have let you go," she said, paling. "I wonder why I didn't. Everyone who reads it will sympathize with Otoko."
"I didn't want to write about you."
"I know I can't be compared with your ideal woman."
"That's not what I meant."
"I was hideously jealous."
"Otoko is gone.  You and I will be living together for a long, long time.  But a lot of the Otoko in that book is pure fiction.  For instance, I have no idea what she was like while she was in the hospital."
"That kind of fiction comes from love."
"I couldn't have written without it," said Oki abruptly.

"Thanks to your novel I've come to understand Otoko very well. As much as I've suffered from it, I can see that meeting her was a good thing for you."

Two lives were buried in darkness with this novel.

Otoko, as model for the novel's heroine, had received no compensation.  Nor had a word of complaint come either from her or from her mother. Unlike the painter or sculptor of a realistic portrait, he was able to enter his model's thoughts and feelings, to change her appearance as he pleased, to invent and to idealize out of his own imagination.  Yet the girl was beyond doubt Otoko. He had freely poured out his youthful passion, without thinking of her predicament, or of the troubles that might lie ahead for an unmarried girl.  No doubt it was his passion that had attracted readers, but possibly it had also become an obstacle to her marriage.

When Oki was tired of writing, or when a novel was going badly, he would lie down on the couch in the open corridor beside his study.  In the afternoon he would often fall asleep there for an hour or two.  Only in the past few years had he got into the habit of taking such naps.
When he stretched out on it his difficulties vanished from his mind.  It was uncanny. While he was writing a novel, he tended to sleep poorly at night and to dream about his work.
Only rarely did he feel, as he used to when he worked at night, that fatigue stimulated his imagination.
My naps must be a sign of age, Oki thought. But the couch was magical.
Whenever he rested on it he fell asleep and awakened refreshed.  Not infrequently he could find a new pathway through the difficulties that had brought his writing to a standstill. A magic couch.

How could he possibly write about her, except to borrow her beauty for one of his characters?

But a model has to be another live human being.  Novels need human beings too, no matter how much you write about landscapes.

"Anyway, being a novelist's model is different.  It's an unrewarded sacrifice."

If he had not written about it, perhaps that vision of herself would not have remained alive for so many years.

"You're more than I deserve. It's a love I never dreamed I'd find.  Happiness like this is worth dying for..."

Was that another time when she missed a chance to die?

This suddenly vanishing beauty could be recaptured by a writer and made into a moving work of art--

"And your inspiration comes from this tomb?"
"My inspiration? I don't know ---" At that moment Keiko let herself topple against himm.

"Right in front of your precious tombstone... Why don't you give me some fond memories of it?  This stone is where your heart is.  That's all it means."

"It's true there comes a time when a tombstone loses its meaning."

"I'll always remember being in your arms in front of an old tomb on a morning like this.  It seems strange for a tomb to create a memory."

He could not see Keiko until she was standing on the low diving board, poised to dive.  Keiko's taut body was silhouetted against Lake Biwa and the distant mountains.  The mountains were veiled in mist.  A faint, elusive pink tinged the darkening waters of the lake.  By now the yacht sails reflected the tranquil color of the evening. Keiko dived in, sending up a cloud of spray.

"I want us to cut through our fate and drift along on the waves.  Tomorrow always escapes us."


2017-06-08

Harmogu comeback

As soon as I complain about K-pop drying up, I receive consolation from another source.  I am happy to report that Harmogu is back, all instruments on fire!
Another case where the Harmogu version is a vast improvement on the original, stripping away the annoying production to bring out real music.

NJ <-/ /-> Kpopper

[At last, a post about K-pop]
So SISTAR is the latest Kpop group to break up.  Unlike others, they have been given a dignified and honorable exit with a farewell promotion.
SISTAR
Still it is a sad moment, and it feels like Kpop has lost its way, or at least its connection to this self-styled Kpopper.  As for many in the West, Kpop itself only rose to my awareness after the Gangnam Style phenomenon, but the YouTube linkages to Hyuna and 4minute led me rapidly down the rabbit hole of mesmerizing girl group videos.  Yes I will admit that it is only the girl groups that interest me, since Kpop functions for me as a hypnotic energizer and stressbuster, not as a deeper conduit of dark emotion (with one exception to be mentioned in a moment). Those girl groups should have at least some individuality, talent, maturity, and creativity, however. SISTAR had all of that, along with a high mesmerization factor (search YouTube for "SISTAR Dance Practice" if you need evidence).
The roster of worthwhile groups still in operation is shrinking.  I am not a fan of the "crowd of cutesy schoolgirls" approach that seems to dominate now.  Twice could pull it off, but even they appear to be regressing rather than maturing into a more adult style.  The once ultradynamic EXID is not the same in its Solji-less incarnation, although hopefully she will rejoin soon.  Solji is the one really stirring voice I have found in Kpop who can touch other emotional levels. She really needs a comeback. AOA has suffered controversy and lackluster releases since "Heart Attack", and now its greatest talent, Choa, is breaking away.  Girls Day continues to be solid, but feels overproduced these days. Red Velvet has so much potential, but also seems to be under pressure and sometimes misfires ("Rookie" was just annoying - like Twice's "Signal" is).  DalShabet at least is still plugging away and improving along with Subin's songwriting.

And what has been lost?
The big breakups like 4minute are quite heavy blows, especially since their very last songs were more innovative, risk-taking, and mature.  Hyuna will "roll deep" for a little while longer, but that is just partial consolation. The Wonder Girls will be missed.  And the quirky surprises and fun of Crayon Pop and the delightful Orange Caramel are gone.
Obviously time passes and people mature and move to other projects and stages.  I wish them all the success with that.  But I think I will be consoling myself with 2013-2016 videos, looking back at that as a golden age of Kpop.  The live connection has been broken, and the thrill is gone.
[For any crazed stans out there, please, this is just my opinion...]

2017-04-13

What is music, exactly?

What is music exactly?

Plato condemnded it...

Islam condemns it...

Some kind of powerful emotion is crystallized in music.  Something that makes certain control freaks (yes, looking at you, Plato and Islam) lose it.

Music, through some kind of irrational process, bonds with the places in our consciousness that are fused with our deepest emotions and values.  And so it is dangerous.  The kind of music that we like is connected with the kind of person that we are.  So it is something very important, and very powerful.

One thing that an old person realizes is that the music that one individual perceives as important is actually the same as the most important music in the world.  And so, if one person has one dedicated fan, that is as important as a pop star having a million "likes" on social media.

Bowie is dead, Prince is dead, Freddie is dead, Chuck is dead but their music lives on. "Under Pressure" was my soundtrack to this brief essay. May we all have some kind of immortality where we live on in the memories of those who love us.



2017-04-06

Mongolia, a good place to die

Actually, seems to be true, according to this article.  Mongolia, as usual, punching above its weight.
Something to meditate on.

2017-03-10

Musicians are suffering

"Musicians are suffering under this new economic model", a quote from this article on music ownership by Ted Gioia that sparked some thoughts.  This bear is old enough to remember the era that Gioia describes when big records with big graphics were collected as cult objects.
Had this once upon a time, but that pictured is not mine.
Like boiled frogs, we have gradually become accustomed to the present environment of convenient digital supremacy, but the facts Gioia cites are still shocking:  "Last year, more songs were streamed on any single day than were downloaded during the entire year."
And as that shift has occurred, all revenues now go to the platform (looking at you, YouTube) instead of the artist - not that the artist had a great share before.
Gioia is making a plea for the return of some kind of tangible cultural artifact that will accrue value and endure, and while that is a very sympathetic point of view, I cannot believe it can become true.
Perhaps out of nostalgia, Gioia omits much of the downside of the physical. People bought a lot of albums because they had to, if they wanted to choose their music at all.  People bought albums because they had to do that in order to find out what the other 9 songs a band was playing in addition to their hit single.  Often these albums were BAD, and the purchase was a cause for regret.  Yes, the arduous and costly exploration in search of good music generated a strong bond with the favorites that one discovered, but the process was onerous.
The limited supply of physical artifacts meant that people were locked into a limited set of choices from the big record companies, for the most part, except for those who took extreme measures to chase down their dreams.
And, let's not forget that records were HEAVY.  Anyone who ever had to change apartments a couple of times began to regret having a big collection and to pare it down.  
The big curated collection of 8,000 rarities was the provenance of those who had the money, time, and stability to build such a hoard. Now anyone can access almost any music of their exact taste without extreme measures.  Yes, that is no longer a special form of achievement. But perhaps we should not be striving for great achievements of consumption, but rather listen to the music for its own sake and develop our spirit (and spirit animals) accordingly.

2017-03-02

In retreat from Facebook

NJKpopper is an old and grizzled bear, and so he remembers the ancient times before Facebook ever existed.  Those days were full of things that are rare now, like privacy...

NJKpopper also lived through the first algal bloom of FB, where suddenly all of one's high school, college, grad school and work acquaintances were dumped into the same fishbowl.  Of course, in such an environment, all you can do is smile idiotically and say "Hi!".  I even remember, although most of the world seems to have forgotten or erased this, that for a brief time, FB had a thumbs down option to dislike something, until it was removed after a couple of months.  FB was much simpler then, however.  Just a kind of electronic directory and picture-sharing service.
I first bailed on FB in 2012, when they forced users to accept the "Timeline" display of all activity on the site.  And for years I never missed out.
Then, I was lured back in. I still don't think that was a mistake.  There were some benefits to being able to tap into the massive communication platform that FB has become.
But, I still dislike the fishbowl aspect of FB. I still believe in the early vision of the open Internet, where everything is accessible and discoverable, but atomized and not closely tracked.  If I post something here on my blog, only the NSA, FSB and a couple of close friends will read it. But if I post to FB, I know that it will not only be visible to all of my connections, but that it will be recommended to others and recorded in my profile for anyone who might browse my identity in the future.
And, frankly, the quality of interaction that FB encourages is just awful compared to what occurs in genuine human conversation, or solitary, long-form writing, or even solipsistic medium-form writing like blogs.  So that is a big minus.  And our time on this earth is limited.
What I discovered during my brief return to FB was a bit disturbing, however.
I do not like the detailed tracking that occurs via FB/Messenger, where everyone can see exactly how long it has been since you were last active, and not only whether, but when, you have viewed a message from someone else.  This level of atomistic micromanagement is destructive of healthy, trusting, nurturing human relationships.
Although they are proposed as solutions to the privacy problem, the FB privacy controls are utterly nonsensical and untrustworthy.  From the start, I have always assumed that anything I write on FB is basically equivalent to what I write on the public web, since even if privacy controls operate now, in the future they will either be breached by a hacker, or by FB itself.
But it is worse than that. Although many people block their Friends list from public view, if you "friend" someone, it turns out that you can actually view their entire Friend list while you are waiting for their response.  So the Friends list is never actually private.
Secondly, the sheer amount of material that FB preserves is astounding.  If you start to actually search, beyond what FB serves up to you, for information on any person, you will see that FB keeps everything.  And given that most people accept the defaults of letting anything be visible by "Friends of Friends", all of that is essentially visible to the world.
It was actually such an incident that drove me off of FB the first time, when a long ago photograph was unexpectedly surfaced to FB.  It was my prom photo, with my prom date, post-intoxication.  I might post it here, and at least it will not be publically tagged for all to see via facial recognition.  While professionals in the NSA and FSB have always had access to this information, only FB makes this kind of detrimental information available to amateurs and idiots of all stripes, which is why it is so awful.
This article on Capgras syndrome is really quite good on how our primate social brains begin to interact in odd ways with electronic simulacra.  Worthy of more reflection.

2017-02-07

Contentment is their default state

A nice article, if you are a cat person, by John Gray in the New Statesman.

"One of the most attractive features of cats is that contentment is their default state. Unlike human beings – particularly of the modern variety – they do not spend their days in laborious pursuit of a fantasy of happiness. They are comfortable with themselves and their lives, and remain in that condition for as long as they are not threatened. When they are not eating or sleeping, they pass the time exploring and playing, never asking for reasons to live. Life itself is enough for them."





2017-02-01

One year later (Хармогү, миний дэлхий даяар дуртай дуучин)

Today marks one year since I first encountered Harmogu, so it deserves commemoration. Somehow through a lucky accident, YouTube recommended the video below to me, which caught my attention. The image - black and white, downcast eyes, intensity, a bookshelf - promised a special experience. And it was. I clicked, and it was the start of something that changed my life.
To this day, I wonder what prior combination of searches and activities caused this video to bubble up into YouTube's suggestions, but I have no clue.    
It is a matter of public record what happened next, since my comments are all there to show my reaction, played out over the next couple of months. 
One might call it a mid-life crisis, but a subconscious wildfire was ignited. My friend says that Harmogu activated my "Inner Mongolian", and I agree. There was plenty of smoldering peat that had been laid down 15 years earlier when I had my last serious Mongolian plans, so all I had to do was return to my shelf of Mongolian books (and memories) to reactivate what turned out to be a launch sequence.
Smoldering peat burns for many years
So there is that. There are also several other layers to this onion.  One is that Harmogu's music has a very direct effect on me, somehow being at my precise personal resonant frequency. [This is why the Secret Mongols of History are related to Ellison's lower frequencies in the earlier blog post.] I can't claim any objectivity in that, but, having analyzed it endlessly, I know that it is a real effect.  I will save the "oohing and aahing" for my playlists and YouTube comments, and for a longer future post that could do justice to the full effect that these songs have on me.
Another layer is that the whole combined persona of Harmogu as a musician, writer, and photographer extraordinaire was very inspiring to me, and led me to realize that I was going to have to let some of my content loose on the (unsuspecting) public if I was going to be prepared for the eventual next step. So this blog and my other outlets have emerged from that.
I would not really have imagined a year ago the long and involved sequence of events that led to the very intense process of "Mongolizing" [as it is called around here] that occurred, but then again, my life is jam-packed with previously unimaginable events that I am now forced to write down as fiction if they are to be believed at all. New friends, new life, and new energy have fissioned off from the chain reaction.
This blog only attempts to capture a few of the reflections on the surface of some deep waters that I am diving into. I see something beautiful down there, and eventually I hope to describe it properly. Some of that will be hard, and some of it I am not sure if I am prepared for. But it was Harmogu that catalyzed the final stages of this reaction, for which I am so grateful.


2017-01-17

Человек есть существо ко всему привыкающее

Man is a creature that can get used to anything - so said Dostoevsky, and he documented that amply with specific examples in the House of the Dead.
Лидия Вележева, Идиот, 2003
These days, it seems as if the human species is in danger of losing its self-consciousness entirely amid a never-ending stream of self-administered electronic dopamine jolts transmitted from one mass hive to the next.  And we seem to be just fine with that - after all, as long as there is still ice left to melt, your drink stays cool, right?  Only one with the stubbornness of a Nastasya Filippovna -- one who can be self-directed along an independent path even at the risk of unreason -- has a chance of breaking out of those patterns.  As her example shows, however, there are costs and dangers to that path.




2017-01-07

Last Christmas

Returning from a more extreme hibernation experience than expected, this bear discovered that George Michael was added to the long list of departed musicians this year.  If he is gone at 53, it makes one less optimistic about long-term prospects.

Did not even realize until today that "Last Christmas" was originally a George Michael/Wham! song, what with so many cover versions about.  But my ignorance makes it all the more tragic.  Death angels have arrived.