Showing posts with label beethoven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beethoven. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 October 2021

1989 Eastern Ireland

22.7.89 Glendalough

Already a day out – but at least this time I'm trying to catch Ireland – last year's Cork and Kerry has almost all been lost.  A bad start: I slept barely at all Thursday night – real-live projectile vomiting whilst down at this years Ad Managers' conference.  I attended the first session then drove blitzed out of my head to Heathrow – a miracle I didn't fall asleep.

More fun at Dublin – no hire cars at the airport.  In to Dublin, to Hertz's south of the city depot.  A brand new jamjar (17 miles on the clock.)  Drove down the N11 to Bray, where I was meeting Sister Anne at the DART station.  Everything so slow and relaxed, the cars old and small.  Bray itself a bit like Brighton or some other cheap south-coast seaside resort.  Lots of young bored people around.  Not where one would want to stay – no character.  The tourist office at the top of the High Street, upstairs in a Victorian building.  At the back, a great metal plate "to weigh up to 10 tons".

Picked up Anne, then drove down the N11.  Outside Bray, the character of the countryside changed: great masses, green and wooded, reared up – not an Ireland I had seen before.  Again, very peaceful.  Passed tempting sign to Glendalough, but went on to Wicklow.  Which turned out to be Bray with a dirty-looking harbour (shades of Isle of Man's Castletown).  We phone the Royal Hotel at Glendalough and book two rooms.

The drive there rises to a plateau of rolling countryside.  Tiny back roads, hedges – reminds me of Cornwall.  The hotel lies in the valley down a dead-end road.  It is a turn of the century building, long and fitted out sparsely.  A nice two-star hotel feel to it.  The staff are obliging but amateurish: it is very quiet – strangely so in this glorious weather, and so near to Dublin.  And this the height of the season.  Early to bed to try to sleep off what was systemic dysfunction the night before (Tippett piano sonatas hammering through my fevered brain.)

This morning up late-ish (breakfast at 8.30am) then out to view the antiquities hereabouts.  First, the cathedral, behind the hotel.  A wonderful setting: sloping gravestones lichen-covered, high grass, a few paths, all in a valley floor.  A birch tree, leant against by the wind, with five trunks like five fingers.  The cathedral decrepit, but its Romanesque character visible.  Gravestones within – one to a man who died at 105 years – imagine the changes he spanned.

Then to the great Round Tower.  Surprisingly straight and clean in its lines, its surface broken by the interstices of rocks.  A celtic rocket.  (Priest's house).  St Kevin's Kitchen, an authentically dark and gloomy place with its little bell tower, leading to a bridge over a burbling brook.  A flotilla of pond-skaters, a dragonfly and the intensest green; strange butterfly.

Across the river along a path amidst bracken (Finzi's/Hardy's song) to St Saviour's, a spaceship in a clearing.  Flies everywhere – how I hate 'em.  Then by car to the upper lake, where I write now.  Wonderfully serene.  The water clear to the gravel beneath, the high valley walls descending steeply.  To the left, wooded slopes which remind me of Lake Phewa in Nepal; to the right, glorious pine trees, their branches picked out in rich browns and oranges.  High up to the right a crag with strangely blasted trunks like telegraph poles.  At the head of the valley, a waterfall, lots of scree.

23.7.89 Wexford

From Glendalough we moved to the Wicklow Gap – spoilt by fir plantations, then up to Russborough House.  First to Poulaphouca House for lunch.  A strange place.  The bar long and dark, with rows of small bottles, deer heads, deep-brown furniture and a TV playing Irish football high at one end.  A clump of young middle-aged men drinking silently, watching.  Through to the restaurant, empty except for us (when do these places even get busy?).  The food surprisingly good – excellent home-made mushroom soup – shades of my last visit in Kerry.  What made the place was the Ives-like music: Beethoven's Piano Concerti 1 and 2, Chaka Khan, and musique concrète from the kitchen.  Wonderful.

Then to Russborough House.  Beautiful lichened grey stone, classical Palladian design with two wings.  The house looks out to the Wicklow mountains.  Tour only, alas.  Just a few rooms open to the public, but some considerable wealth therein.  Good sequence of Murillos, Guardi, Constables, Vernet (Shades of Avignon), Ruisdael (Berechtsheim), Hobbema.  Shame about the stolen Vermeer, still missing.  A cosy feel, with furniture and ornaments chosen with care.  Friendly library.  Almost liveable in.  Lafranchini bros. Plaster-work brilliant, especially on ceilings.

After tea in an old kitchen (?) - high roof, unadorned walls (à la
 Kedleston) on to the Sally Gap.  Beautiful sense of space and desolation, spoilt only by the encroaching firs.  Stopped to admire Lough Tay, a strange industrial brown, glistening below.  Then completing the circuit, to Laragh, through the Vale of Clara and Vale of Avoca – the latter very attractive.  It was growing late so we hurried straight down to Wexford, staying at the Talbot Hotel, large but more character than White's, plus a better location.

That location gave us a brilliant early morning sun across the sea, glistening like white-hot gold.  After a full breakfast – kippers and gooseberry jam – a walk out to the breakwater.  High above, a huge mackerel sky like a lace shawl.  The waterfront before us, very still and peaceful, like the fronts on the Liffey in Dublin.

Wexford itself tiny, not particularly distinguished, but heaps better than most other places – Ireland's towns are surprisingly ugly.  I find the Opera Festival House with difficulty – it lies in the totally misnamed High Street – a tiny back road – and is almost invisible.  I wonder what the Festival is like.  Otherwise, little else of note here, the church and abbey ruins feeble.  The harbour and sea the best things.  I sit writing this in blazing sunshine at the end of Henrietta Street, a little semi-circular indent off the harbour.  Oddly, there is a railway line along the quays – functional, without warning.

24.7.89  Castletown House, Celbridge

I write this now in the coolest cellar imaginable; outside is blistering eternal sunshine.  I have eaten a passable cream tea in the heart of this mansion.  But back to yesterday.  After Wexford, half in search of the mysterious Yola – another lost language of these islands (Cornish, Faroese, Manx…). Past the lovely Lady's Island Lake – a weird castle tower balanced on edge like a stunt double-decker bus – then down to Kilmore Quay.  Anne wanted a trip out to the Saltees, which looked like huge, languorous whales in the sunshine, but no go.

The harbour charming: a huge poem of rusting cables and great hulks.  The village was relatively unattractive.  And the beach was simply too inviting.  So we accepted its long shelving beach, and hard clear sand left by the retreating tide.  There for two hours, a thin veil of could overhead like a huge piece of lace, nicely tempering the extreme heat.

From there, back through Wexford to Enniscorthy. Set surprisingly on a hill, it looked, at 3 on a hot Sunday afternoon like a deserted Spanish village during siesta.  Everything shut, but the dynamics of the streets good.  On then to Courtain – a total Butlin's – then up to Arklow.  A cycling race impedes our progress by car.  Parking and continuing on foot, we hear impro jazz bands everywhere.  Down by the estuary, the place is a tip.  Indeed, I am depressed by how many Irish towns are grey, ugly and featureless.  Give me England anytime.

But it was getting late, we were hot and tired, and we passed The Bridge, an eighteenth-century inn on the bridge.  Inside, slightly unprepossessing, but the landlord an honest-looking bloke and only £12/head the night for bed and breakfast.  Out in the evening – after a go on the paddle boats for Anne.  We encounter a big gig (100s) and Irish bands in every pub – of which there are many.  The whole town is a-buzz with music, and hot but happy people.  A surprisingly good Chinese meal (in Arklow?) - but no chopsticks.  Standing on the bridge we saw two worlds: behind us, modern barbarism, squat shacks and storehouses; in front, a vision of georgic beauty, Wicklow hills in the distance.

Driving out this morning, after a hearty Irish breakfast, we took the coast road to Wicklow, which was stunning: peaceful and beautiful, reminding me of the South of France and Cornwall at once.  Some nice villas too.  Then via the N11 to Enniskerry and Powerscourt.  Normally gardens do nothing for me – but these were different.  The setting for the main Italianate garden was magnificent: terraces down to a huge pond shimmering between the dotting lily leaves.  High trees everywhere, and in the far distance, the prospect of the Great Sugar Loaf, plus attendant hills.  What a backdrop.  Otherwise the usual paraphernalia of lichened urns, green dribbling statues and perfect lawns.  Other features are a Japanese garden set in a formally boggy hollow – à la Golden Gate park – with chickweed-type(?) greenery everywhere.

Near the entrance, past strange mushroom-shaped trees, a path led through wildly-coloured flowers – including huge blue thistles – to a gate in an old brick wall.  Thence to a magic realm: a dolphin fountain set in another shimmering pond.  Magic.

The house itself – as so many seem to be in Ireland – was destroyed by fire, though only recently.  As a result, the shell shows strange vegetable forms pressing against the lower room's windows – as if a conservatory had gone mad.  Inside, the visible remains of old wallpaper are sad.  The architecture itself looks unspecial, but apparently its contents were fine.  From this idyll, to the Powerscourt waterfall, also in the house's grounds.  Set in a lush hidden valley – lots of oaks – this comes cascading down a steeply slanting face of rock like a huge twisted silk scarf, or a Christo wrapping.  A stream wends away with tawny water, oaks overhead adding to the Dutch effect.  Driving away to Glencree, the retreating form of the Great Sugar Loaf.  The road down to Tallaght – so near Dublin – surprisingly bracing.  These must be some of the best-kept secrets in Ireland.

Now I leave the Castletown coffee room – a tour of OAP Yanks has arrived – why do the old travel?  What profit can it bring them now?  The long passageway is cool as only old houses can be.  As you might expect, many curious rooms: a glimpse of an old kitchen; a wine cellar; a room with a hip bath and crude frescoes of a foxes' feast – leading to a narrow white scullery – wit: the picture above the foxes' feat is of a huntsman fallen in a ditch; a dark room full of randomly placed chains like a surrealist work of art – a cool, dank small.  Locked, a nursery room with a huge crude doll's house, and furniture, a cradle and old suitcase; next to it an empty bedroom – bed, wardrobe, low chest of drawers, all very 1900s.

Inside the house – the entrance hall – a wonderful approximate cube – gleaming white.  My eye is caught by a chamber organ, eighteenth century – four and half octaves.  Ionic columns and half columns, simple design though complex ornamentation.  In the office, I see an amazing piece of furniture – with pigeonholes, drawers et al.  A leather chair – covered with a hood…?  On the staircase – Lafranchini (?) plasterwork.  A rather pleasant tour with a young lady who reminds me of my secretary Linda… Rather intelligent, by the sound of it…

The house quite interesting – but sad since so much had been sold off.  The best room was the print room – prints applied on the walls as decoration.  The facade is large but rather unimpressive – no focus, and the colonnades are rather short.  The gardens are simply parkland, again, no grand focus.  But a pleasant place, on an enjoyable day out.

On to Dublin – sampling the delights of the one-way system.  In fact, Dublin rush-hour looks pretty wild. I park in St. Stephen's Green, not far from the hotel I stayed in two years back (Powers).  Then a walk.  My feet gravitate towards Grafton Street – I am tempted by the bustle of Bewley's, but resist – then on to Trinity College Dublin.  Perhaps the echoes of the Trinity make this place attractive.  Then down to see the Project Art Gallery.  A nice space, simple, with Satie gently playing.  As I leave, someone cycles right in and out of another door.  Interestingly, this whole area – quite decrepit when I visited before – is becoming quite lively, and looks to be a Soho or Greenwich Village in the making.

The same also goes – as far as restoration – to much of Dublin that I see this time.  There are a lot of people around, and the atmosphere is more upbeat.  However, the same seems not to be the case for the rest of Ireland I saw – still very backward, with black (Bakelite?) telephones, and punch-button adding machines.  It makes you realise what England must have been like until recently to the visiting Yanks…

For supper, inevitably, I return to the Colony.  Much as I remember it: right on, stand-offish, with studenty posters and studenty posers.  Good angry music in the background.  Just right.  Then a turn round St Stephen's, on to the airport.

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Thursday, 25 June 2020

1996 Vienna, Venice

Vienna 7.8.96

Donau Exhibition in the Schottenstift.  First room – very Peter Greenaway – a screen showing a bucket of water – in a bucket.  Pictures of the Ionian Sea.  Cliffs of Moher.  All slightly similar.  Beautiful space, showing the vaults of the church.  

Downstairs to the main exhibition: the sound of..."The Blue Danube".  Undine – set on the Donau – written by Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué. "Danu" = river.  A picture of Wien 1845 – surrounded by fields.  A panorama showing the Danube before it was brutally straightened.  Amazing map of 1696, with the Venetian Empire embracing the Adriatic coast.

1994 DDSG – "Donaudampfschiffahrtsgesellschaft" - was closed down: originally it went al the way to the Levant.  Hebbel: "Österreich ist eine kleine Welt, in der die große ihre Probe hält."  "Melusina" – Grillparzer and Ludwig van Beethoven working together? A glass harmonica sounds eerily in the distance.  Interesting that after World War I, Austria was defined by what was left after creating all the other lands.  "Le reste, c'est Autriche".  In the slide show, with fine aerial photos of the bending river (and the isolated oxbows).

A moment of reflection.  My train arrived in Wien an hour late, so I have only about nine hours here, for which I'm paying about £120. But if I stayed the night, I'd just be another tourist (whereas in fact I'm a complete nutter).  Frighteningly long train from Rome to which our single carriage from Milan was added.  Slept reasonably well, although the air was in short supply at times.  Cappuccino and brioche on the train (good job I didn't wait).  In a way, I just wanted to show that it is possible to pop up to Wien for the day.  I also hope to hop out at Venice (at 4 in the morning) for one of those magic strolls at dawn.

Interesting collage of Austrian National anthems, including a strange Bundeshymne, marked "WAM".  On the other side, "Kompositionen und Klänge" – my kind of place this, deep in the heart of Vienna, with a collage of music, time to just think, to be… (Brahms' 4 on now…). Well, useful for me, but probably a little unsatisfactory for your average visitor.  Best bits the slide shows, confusing layout of the space, too – as I said to the PR lady – who thrust a catalogue on me, convinced that I was about to write all this up.  I don't think I was dishonest – I just showed my Press Card…

Anyway, in the slightly cool air (nice for walking), along to the old Trześniewski – which, I'm sorry to say, has added some glitz – albeit minimal – in the form of boring incitements to try out its various delights.  Which are still good.  Then along to the nearby music shop, looking for Mozart's "Così, così", which seems not to exist (should be in the Viennese version of Don Giovanni).  Must be from a parallel universe (the owner checked in the Köchel Verzeichnis – could only find "Così: due paroline" from "L'Oca del Cairo", and so refused to believe it existed.

Then down Kärntner Straße - rather tawdry with all its tourists.  I return to the bookshop that I went in a couple of years ago – and regretted not buying the Rilke volume (Suhrkamp?).  They didn't have it this time.  Went into EMI Austria next door: rubbish at outrageous prices.  As I left, a pigeon got me from on high.  I now have some fine stains on my "clean" t-shirt.

Sitting in the café of the Kunsthalle, where I came before.  Aiming to wander out to the Karlskirche, one of my favourites.  There now: it has lost its scaffolding and can be seen in (nearly) all of its glory.  U-bahn to Stephansplatz.  Wandering into a bookshop with lots of linguistic books (Baltische Sprachen, Alte aramäische Sprache etc.) and Colloquial Basque (in English) – yummy…

Now in Peterskirche – the first time here, I think.  Very kaiserlich und königlich it seems to me – old gilt, ochre walls.  Looking in a few more bookshops, took a trip down to the Westbahnhof (on the U3 – "my" U-bahn, since I was here on the day it opened).  It's much more parochial – going West – nothing so romantic as the Südbahnhof, with all the wonderfully evocative names – and that Drang nach Osten…

Taking U-bahn back, and then S1 rail service (which always worries me for some reason – I never feel that I'm going where I want to), back to find Rosenkavalier restaurant at the Südbahnhof.  No Gulaschsuppe this time, but Wiener Schnitzel + Vöslauer Wasser with Hundertwasser's characteristic label.

On the train – 418/34, as before.  But now we have a family of three – mother, five-to-six year old son, three-to-four year old daughter – who are ethnic Chinese, but come from Calcutta, and now live in Wien… How complicated it all becomes.  Also present an exaggeratedly-leggy young woman of indeterminate nationality.  Taller than me…  Just as a point of reference, the leggy is Slovenian… Nope, sorry, not Slovenian, Slovak – and a model to boot, en route to Calabria.  The Chinese woman also speaks English – and Hindi: what a polyglot lot we are in here tonight… Although these kids are driving me nuts (as is the model's smoking, albeit in the corridor), it is an interesting microcosm of the future.  Where everyone speaks several languages and drops from one into the other…

Venice 8.8.96

On the Fondamenta Diedo, walking through a silent, deserted Venice at 4 in the morning.  Air balmy.  Cats miaow distantly, boats' ropes creak, water drips.  Overhead, a sliver of moon dodges in and out of the clouds.  Selig

In Piazza San Marco – alone.  Raining slightly now – air very humid.  The sky lightening gradually.  Faint sounds of the dawn chorus – and of refrigerator units.  A beetle crawls on the step beneath me.  Down by the gondolas, which thrash like so many startled cows as the waves from the vaporetto slap their bottoms.

Light now (6am), in Campo Santa Maria Formosa; they have put out chairs and tables in the square (shocking).  I wonder (always) who owns the ruined but fine palazzo opposite the church.  A story there surely.  Past the forestiera – lights in the main hall.  Now at Santi Giovanni e Paolo.  Everywhere in the city there is the smell of fresh-baked bread.

The sky quite leaden now, with a strange line in the sky, as if it had been cut with a knife and sewn up.  Eight o'clock, and I'm a wee bit stanchino.  Thunders growl and some bright flashes of lightning fork to the east.  The wind is getting up: it'll rain.  Time for another breakfast…

It is now utterly bucketing down – I have taken refuge in the Bar Ristorante Da Gino (ciao!, Gino…), just a few steps from "our" restaurant, "Ai Cugniai".  I hope this rain burns itself out in the next 30 minutes, or I am stuffed (a statement that begs for the following sentence: "yes, I am stuffed…").  Vedremo.

Imagining a world without Venice is like imagining one without Mozart.  But this is daft: imagine a world without Mozart's 63rd, 74th and 99th symphonies, or the late operas – "Die Gesellschaft", "Immer die Liebe" and "Amletto" – or his amazing late string quartets inspired by Beethoven's Rasumovsky set (and what a pity Beethoven died so tragically young – imagine what symphonies and piano sonatas he might have produced…)

What's nice about these bars is the sense of family – as well as Gino, it's all first-name terms here.  Pity they are smoke like the proverbial.

Re-reading the Siena Days in this notebook, I am struck by my double privilege: not just to have seen these things wonderful things, but to have returned to them.  The joy of recognition, re-discovery and new discovery.  The same, of course, with Venice, which I have visited perhaps ten times now.  But all the more important to stay here only a few days, lest it become familiar and lose its glorious improbability.

Gino sings quietly behind the bar.

To the Palazzo Grassi, "I Greci dell'Occidente".  Interesting distinction between colonisation and founding (metropolis = mother-city).  Greeks brought the polis – city – with them.  Amazing the tribes that we know of early Italy: Sikans, Sisidi, Elinians, Ausonians, etc.  Nice oath of the Greeks with the Sicels: "As long as they trod on this earth and had heads on their shoulders" – but they put earth in their shoes and garlic heads hidden in clothing on the shoulders…

The origins of the Doric order: triglyph may have been decorative ends, but mutules were a reflexion of older structures.  Wonderful: the angle conflict of corner triglyphs.  The origin of the temple – oikos (home/hearth).  The link between colonies and the development of classic architecture = propaganda = civic architecture.

The Temple of Apollo at Syracuse – first monument entirely in stone.  Wonderful metope with Odysseus and Alcyoneus (550BC).  Goethe on the Selinous temples: "oppressive and almost terrifying".  Selinous – wow.  Manifestation of town planning because aligned with the town.  Syracuse – 733BC – its street plan is used to this day.  Interesting how close Thucydides is to all this.

Money was mostly used to pay mercenaries.  Each city had its own weights systems – which made commerce difficult.  Greek tyrants affirmed rule with public works – pushed Agrigento  to do the same.  And of course, the colour of the ceramics.  The Ionic order, especially at Metaponto, all about Athens vs. Sicily.  This war destroyed Athens and its empire.

Amazing diagrams using coloured blocks to show ratios of various parts of the temple – the issue of why is one more beautiful than another – if maths is the basis of beauty.  Town planning at Naxos (Sicily).  Wonderful all the dubious stories and opinions on the Boston ThroneSybaris = Sybaritic = decadence.  Description of enforced deportations, return of citizens – like Bosnia.  Hippodamus of Miletus – urban theoretician, urban blocks.  The change in theatrical masks from variable to fixed.  The catapult was invented at Syracuse.  Colours used to articulate architecture: red for horizontal, blue for vertical.  The Mausoleum at Halicarnassus is like Étienne-Louis Boullée

Since I have missed the 11 o'clock train and there isn't one at 12.06, I may as well luxuriate in the sunny (and increasingly touristy-filled) Venice.  To the Caffè di Torino – but not for chocolate this time: for tramezzini.

Although I was not particularly impressed by the background "info" on the exhibition, I think that I can say that I learnt more from this than most others I have ever been to (with the emphasis on learning).  That is, it taught me both about the roots of Classicism, and also the end of Athens, and how Sicily/Syracuse are central to this.  I can see how to tie together many elements from this.

The exhibition really was excellent – everything that the Danube one, alas, was not: well organised, easy to follow, rich, attractive to look at, and ultimately revelatory.  Walking back to the Ferrovie dello Stato  station I somehow ended up near the Piazzale Roma – very strange how the landscape changes there, with trees and roads – a real few hundred metres of transition – palpable.

Now on the extremely comfortable Zurich train (I'm almost tempted…), which is pleasantly empty at the moment.  Parenthetically, it seems that I have been quite prescient all these years in using the @ sign in my notebooks instead of writing "at"…  I did notice, though, that there is an interesting exhibition in Trieste – of Czech-held Venetian paintings.  I quite fancy seeing Trieste in winter...

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