Showing posts with label san gimignano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label san gimignano. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 September 2021

1991 Lisbon

15.3.91 Gatwick

Strange to be sitting back here (in the café, needless to say) having failed to eat my statutory (US) muffin – only a suspiciously evanescent doughnut – beginning another of these black books – the echo of another time – but which one?  Egypt? - would be apt since the first real draft of Egyptian Romance is almost done.

But an interesting day – with headhunters, then telling my boss, then flirting with Fran – who actually and unconsciously quoted from Rubbish in Glanglish – and then to here.  But.  I do wonder where "nel mezzo del cammin" I am going… and Glanglish is a flop – except with kind friends.  So now I run away – Lisbon today, New York two weeks ago, Shannon in two weeks (fixed up today...who cares?)

Lisboa 16.3.91

I have messed up in a fairly serious way: it bucketed down rain during the night.  But all I have is my standard jacket.  Twit.

Hotel good: basic room, comfortable bed and stunning view over Lisboa (as we say).  To my left (I sit now in the top floor bar for breakfast) the castle on the hill, to my right another Golden Gate bridge (orange, that is).  In between, an undulating sea of red and orange roofs.  Further north, the blocks of flats and mini skyscrapers.  Low clouds – but also a tiny hint of blue.

A stroll into town.  Temperature perfect – if the rain keeps off…  Through small, winding, steep backstreets – easy to find the main road – but getting back hard.  However, quite run-down.  Some covered with old tiles.  Doggy-do everywhere.

Down to Praça da Figueira – quite nice, then to Rossio – good character, lots of interesting buildings.  One thing I saw on the way here: Miles Davis is in town tomorrow: if only…

Everyone, but everyone, wears black leather jackets.  I, needless to say, stand out like the proverbial.  As with all countries fresh from years of repression (Spain,  Greece), there is a lot of soft porn in evidence.  

I sit now at the riverside, at the edge of Praça do Comércio.  The river stinks, and reminds me of Varanasi for some reason...  People pour off the ferry.  Up along to the Alfama.  Past church of the the Madeleine, to the Cathedral.  Beggars outside.  Inside, five, six women.  Very over-the-top baroque interior, fine dome over the nave.  Walls faced with pale dirty orange marble.  Totally OTT baldacchino-cum-altar.  A woman rises from praying to touch the corner of an oil painting of a saint.  Then she stands, praying under her breath, before leaving.  Serious business.  Instead of lighting, candles: you put money in a slot, and one of the around 160 bulbs on plastic candles lights up.  Hmm…

Moron: now I'm in the cathedral – the other was some parish church.  Lovely Romanesque job – pure rounded arches.  That old, cold earthy smell – reminds me of that place near Aldeburgh.  Very bare inside, very austere and beautiful.  Up to Largo Santa Luzia – beautiful.  Lovely ensemble of buildings, angled roads (cobbled), and the church with its glorious tiles, and stunning view over the river.  The sun begins to come out.  

Long walk around.  Up to Castelo de S. Jorge – picturesque ruins – reminds me of San Gimignano.  Then a wander through backstreets to Largo Martim Moniz, and then to Coliseu – shut – when does it open?  Unlikely to have seats, I would have thought.  So along to Rossio for coffee at the Café Pique Nigre (???) - anyway, on the pavement, directly facing the fountain.  Very jolly in the sun, which is roaring down through broken clouds now.  Lovely day.  And lovely, as ever, to be here.  Two weeks ago I was in New York – this is getting to be a habit, and feel normal.  

Streets bustling now.  A few blacks around from North Africa (?) - everyone well wrapped up, and with brollies.  A few tourists – French, Dutch here in the café, other coachloads by the castle.  Women typically dark here, dark brown eyes.  Not particularly attractive [PS the other church was supposed to be built on the birthplace of Saint Anthony of Padua – brings Mahler to mind.]  The road where the Coliseu is - R. das Portas de Santo Antão – is very colourful, and looks to be perhaps the real heart of things.  

Once again (or is this a false memory?) a disconcerting sight of a bloke sitting down in the next pavement café, bent over a black book, writing; look up, writing… He has a ponytail – my stylish doppelganger?

Yo! Yo! And triple yo! - a ticket for Miles Davis tomorrow – what larks…

Now in Restaurant Gambrinus – a bit pricey, but what the hell.  Fish soup, then eel steak boiled and '84 white.  Yummy.  Very stiff and formal here – clientele all middle-aged men – and the waiters speak little English, which is interesting.  Things well presented: the wine served with great dash from a height, the soup on a separate table – my sort of place.  Fish soup wonderful – thick and brown like oxtail, with chunks of seafood.  Wine very dry, with a good taste.  Tomato salad was also well presented.  Opposite (I'm up on the balcony) there's a big old bloke puffing on his cigar, drinking his port.  

The eel was disappointing.  I'd imagined a large eel steak – something along the conger line.  Instead, I got a little squit of an eel, cut up into 30 small portions.  Very bony – and it tasted, well, very eely (what a fine word, let's have it again: eely – a bit like Ely, which is el-ig, of course...cf. Swifts "Waterland" – muddy and a bit bland.  But one must try these things.  I've still got the lamb's testicles to try in Lebanese cooking…  And another bit of style: a wonderful blunt chopper-type instrument for scraping the crumbs off.  Creme caramel cut from a mother of a CC…  

I have just ordered a 1944 Port (costing around £10…).  I can see the bottle approaching – dusty, rarely-seen, moved with a reverence befitting its age.  Colheita do 1944 – a rite – shown to me, poured slowly, taken away – like a relic taken back to its sanctuary after the crowds have adored.  It is very tawny, orangey, sherry in colour.  How do I dare drink it?  But in terms of cost it's not much more than that £30 bottle at Pollyanna's I once drank.  So, here goes… Sherry, then a fragrance, then toffee, then the fragrance again.  You can taste the brandy…

The hot, burnt, strong coffee acts as a kind of sandpaper for the palette – served from a kind of chemistry set retort.  A very strange experience – that sense of reverence – 46 years old – older than me – the oldest drink I've ever had…  Probably ten mouthfuls - £1 each.  Also, this port was bottled during the war.  Strange to drink something created then.  But then Portugal is a kind of time capsule, standing outside the mainstream European history.  The residual bitterness of the coffee grouts go well with the port.  The last mouthful – but by now, my senses have been dulled by the power of the first few – Ô paradoxe…  

Long, long walk out to the Gulbenkian Modern Art collection – free with NUJ card.  Fantastic building – pix bit ho-hum, mostly Portuguese.  But some interesting Brit stuff – Michael Andrews, Peter Blake, Hockney, early Hodgkin.  But no expense spared for the collection.

To the main musuem – again free, but sans bag this time.  I ignore the Egyptian stuff – seems pointless really.  The layout of the museum is beautifully spare and sparse, everything presented to the best effect.  Beautiful Roman vases – unusual effects – someone must have been pleased when he discovered them.  Assyrian seals – nice: shown in material the same colour as the cylinder.  Interesting: Armenian art.  We tend to forget that Armenia once was a great empire.  Two fine Rembrandts – one of them a young man in a helmet and armour, the other – very fine – of an old man in almost Scottish garb.  The eyes, the hands very good good, lovely burnished tones of his cloak and gown.  Two unusual Ruysdaels: one of a pool, but with a half-timbered church next to it, the other of a stormy seascape.  Gob-smacking portrait of Colbert by Sebastian Bourdon – I've never seen a pic that seemed so likely to walk out of its frame and say "bonjour".  

Famous Rubens of Hélène Fourment – but in a dress…  A Venetian velvet fan.  Amazing, I recognise a Nattier straight off.  A very human bust of Molière, a very Mozartian smile on his features.  Portrait of Madamoiselle Salle – looking just like Glenn Close…  An extremely naughty statue of Diana by Houdon – complete with labia, not just a bump…  Nice Gainsborough – Mrs Lowndes-Stone – less aloof than many.  A roomful of Venice – all Guardis – nice one of fair in Piazza San Marco – very strange effect – all the grandeur gone.  Including Guardi's realisation of the Palladio bridge at the Rialto

Trouville by Boudin - I vaguely recognised the scene.  Amazing Turner of Quillebeuf - great.  Terrifying shipwreck scene too – makes you realise what the Titanic must have been like.  Pic of Venice – by Corot: dead, dead, dead.  Recognised Fantin-Latour – whatever next?  Lovely Monet.  Burne-Jones – Mirror of Venus with all the reflections terribly off.  Re-looking at Guardi: there are no birds here either – was Venice devoid of them, or did Guardi copy this aspect of Canaletto?  

So, I sit in the restaurant Já Disse – after a trek and a half.  I have heard my first fado – and not bad it was – but the swordfish is off the menu… I am risking cod, which is meant to be characteristic – let's hope it's also good.

From Gulbenkian by metro – very cheap (45 centavos - about 20p) – very clean and efficient – to Soccorso, the nearest stop.  Then out – straight into the red light district.  Very interesting the patterns of people – that strange kind of loitering that is unique to these districts.  Lots of stares as I pass not once, but twice past all the "bars" with ladies – some not so young – outside [fado is off again.  When I entered during a song, they wouldn't let me through – respect for the fado must be a good sign.  A few words on it: I've got blokes here – high baritones, lots of vibrato.  Two guitars – one playing counterpoint de dum stuff, the other, with its characteristic shape, plays an obbligato line.  Voice really keen – minor key stuff – vaguely modal at times.]  Caldo verde – cabbage soup plus potatoes – and <i>one</i> piece of sausage.

At first I was worried that the singers and players were in their woolies – but I realise now that this is actually a guarantee of their authenticity.  One of the problems I had while walking through the grid of Barrio Alto – finding it finally – was deciding which of the ten or so fado restaurants I should choose.  Most disqualified themselves by their deeply tacky ads outside – star-spangled fado stars.  This had little – but it did have a very neatly wordprocessed menu – I went into job interview mode, where details like that count, hovered for ages – then entered.  Looks good so far – perhaps only one other tourist couple, the rest Portuguese.  Interesting design here: a fake wooden roof – rather like Felfela – and some rather gruesome pelts on the walls – foxes et al.

An amazing concoction has turned up – cod and potatoes in boiling butter – lethal – plus garlic.  Yup, totally lethal – pure garlic but, alas, that ain't a problem.  The carafe of vinho has also done its work – on to the chocolate mousse…

So, as I was saying, finally back to the hotel for a rest – I have walked miles today (yo! M. Davis), a shower, then by taxi to Praça do Comércio – fine in the dusk.  Up to Rossio, then out to Barrio Alto – a long walk, missing it at first, going too far, then back to here, wandering and wandering, looking for that place juste – and possibly finding it – insofar as a tourist can in one day.  And now to coffee – but no port after lunchtime.  Dinky coffee cups – with equally dinky coffee spoons.  

One of the singers seems to be the owner/maître d'.  A large lady has rolled in – a started singing rather well – a throaty female voice.  This is definitely the biz – the audience is joining in, visibly moved.  Interesting the jazzy variations in the chorus.  Place filling up now – 19.15pm.  She weighs 20 stone if she's an ounce (a thumb).  Just ordered a madeira (I hope) – when queried, I said "ναι"…the influence lives on.  OK, so I'm weak – on to a second coffee, black, small and perfectly formed – and the madeira – not bad – because it's clear I need to hear more the large lady ('cos it's not over until…).  Nice: singer/owner/maître d' drinking brandy with guests – a good feel here…

Interesting that the madeira has a final slightly bitter aftertaste – unlike the '44 port.  Drinking this stuff is like chromatography on the tongue: lingual chromatography; I can almost feel the different components separate.  

Female chefs – with a kitchen covered in azulejos – and I failed to spot the connection between azul and lapis lazuli – twit.  The fox skin next to me is hammered to the wall with nails and 50 centavos pieces.   

A good day, making life seem quite bearable at times… 

Lisboa 17.3.91

Glorious, glorious morning – though with clouds coming in perhaps.  And what a glorious night yesterday.  Yes, well worth the effort of searching and searching for Já Disse – the singing was pretty authentic – even down to the large lady just dropping in, having a quick sing.  Pity about the "Madeira", which was prime grade engine oil at some point in its life.  Talking of oil, the coffee here is as black – really strong, French-type – milk makes little dent in its negritude.  A pretty sterling breakfast.

It's strange looking out from my eyrie here, how the scene before me – yesterday an inchoate roil of roofs and half-visible streets – has become a city with thoroughfares and characters even.  At various points I can identify landmarks: Santa Luzia, Castelo San Jorge, Rossio, the Eiffel "Tower" of the Santa Justa Lift etc.  I am beginning to claim Lisboa.

But yesterday.  After the meal, and the fado, I emerged into quite a different world from the one I left.  The narrow streets were seething with people – young people, including a fair few senhoritas – they exist here.  As I walked past tiny, nondescript doorways, I saw inside packed smokey rooms, young people everywhere, talking, joking, laughing.  Some were restaurants, some cafés, some bars, some just rooms.  All were low and atmospheric.  I suddenly realised how Soho must once have been – in the 50s? Colin MacInnes et al.? - a tiny area that comes alive only at night, like sea animals animated by the dark wave of water at high tide – I just had to walk and walk – pure being.

But then back to Rossio – the bars along the way spilling out onto the pavements.  Lovely buzz.  Down to the Tejo, smelling like Venice – and indeed much of Lisboa reminds of Venice – Venice on a hill, without the water...especially near my hotel.  "The Hills of Venice"…

I pick a taxi driver who doesn't know the way, so can't find it.  Amazing how few people speak English here – good sign.  I wonder what Miles will be doing today – yo!  Wonderful muzak in the background – old Sinatra hits, numbers from the 60s, musicals, all in swooning strings, chunky saxes, punchy trumpets.

Now that I have my bearings better, I walk easily to Praça de Graça, then to Santa Luzia.  Now in Alfama, sitting in glorious sun, beside São Miguel.  Pigeons coo around me, water plashes from a sea monster in a fountain on a wall.  The sound of Sunday stirrings.  Again, this place is amazingly like Venice, especially with regard to dog-dirt – you can't afford to admire too much lest you put your foot in it.  Also of the square in San Gimignano.  Carpets on a line to dry by the church, two netball baskets – sponsored by Coca-Cola.  I sit on a stone bench backed by a hundred azulejos – all different.

Along to Santo Estêvão, so like San Francesco della Vignola in Venice.  On the way, took the narrowest steps imaginable – the roofs closing above me. Round the back of the church, a blind doggia and azulejos, a strange heavy grille opposite, big stone bollards.  Down the Escolinhas, a zigzag of paths, railings, trees, houses – a photographer's paradise…

By the wotsit monument in Belem, - finally.  Another Moody magical mystery tour.  Decide to take taxi...turns out there is a big run today, with thousands of people – and the road to Belem is closed.  So we end up taking a huge detour.  But...I did find two things serendipitously: the house with the spiked rustication looked like azulejos gone mad – and the great aqueduct.  So all was not lost.

Now in lovely sun, cool breeze, lapping of waves, tens of sailing dinghies out.  I'm sorry, but I rather like the monument – it strides out into space rather fetchingly, the clouds flee behind.  Very peaceful here.

Inside the Torre do Belem – free today.  Harpsichord music (whose? - CPE Bach/WF Bach-ish) – pleasant.  Strange to be in the place – the only place – I've associated with Lisboa in my filing system.  A long way here, hardly worth it frankly…  But pleasant with the music on the harpsichord.

After coffee nearby, to Belem proper, and the Monastery dos Jeronimos.  Gorgeous interior – King's College Chapel-type perpendicular on the roof of the nave, the columns crazily alive – as if the stone were bubbling.  Lots of people around because of the race.  Interesting empty niches along walls with doors beneath.  A sudden burst of sunshine lights up the space.  Fine gallery in the west end – giving a lovely low space underneath.  Double-decker cloisters, small formal garden – wonderfully peaceful – reminds me of Sant'Agostino, again at San Gimignano.  The stone used here weathers beautifully: black and white striping.  In the distance, I hear Gregorian chant, echoing, booming.  Great, tiny (sic) carvings of devils and monsters et al.  To the West, a long, low room with simple scenes on tiles. Fine fireplace and picture of Santo Jeronimo – plus lion…

Rosa dos Mares Restaurant – upstairs – cool, rustic décor – just on Rua de Belem along from Rafael restaurant – Fodor's recommendation, which is closed.  Fairly full with locals – big capacity at back.  Walls rough plaster – very thickly applied, painted pink, white woodwork, wooden floor.  Wine – although house – not bad, slightly tawny.  Whenever I eat in these places – places with pretension – I often think back to those first trips with my family to eat at the London Steak House in Epsom.  Albeit very limited, they did at least introduce me to the concept and normality of eating out – so that later in life I would take to it like the proverbial duck.  I feel sorry for those who whom I meet at work who are plainly ill-at-ease in this context, be they never so senior.  Alas, a little bland the food here.  The vegetable soup lacking flavour, the kid not meaty enough (though not as tough as my goat curry in Brixton…)  Cold baked apple and marsala.  OK… but all for £11.

It's funny, beginning to think about Son of Glanglish...masochism, pure masochism – but when I get back I will send out a few copies for a lark.

To the Museum of Coaches: it joins Moody's Museum of Mad Musems – along with the hunting place – Chambord and the one in Jodhpur.  Good setting for a horror film – a large hall filled with gilt and velvet bristling coaches – all gross.  But undoubtedly, they have a certain something.  Fine group of post horns – perfect circles.  From the gallery, everything looks so old and musty.  And like some mad ancient dragsters convention.

To the Museu Art Antiga – unknown to the taxi driver – perfect timing – 15 minutes before it opens.  Nice Danaid of Rodin.  Unexpected Piero della Francesca – St. Augustine.  Rock solid and stern – his cloak scenes from the Bible.  The terrifying "Temptation of St. Anthony" by Bosch: what a unique and precocious spirit his was – his vision is so modern in many ways – destruction, sexuality, gross consumption, nightmare drug delirium.  And the fluidity of his images – men turning into trees, heads into bodies, animals into men…  The blazing city – the terrors of war and invasion, the flying machines – what looks like a spaceship almost [downstairs, a piano is moving up a semitone at a time in octave tremolos...why?].  Back here after "doing" the museum...it peters out oddly in a new section – very dark and quiet.  Interesting Japanese screens showing the arrival of the first Europeans – the Portuguese.  But the best is the Bosch – so zu sagen.  And I am now exhausted, my feet killing me.  

The lord gives etc. - interesting ripoff in the taxi – he had a meter in the glove department – and only revealed at the end, and obviously running for a while – but I realised too late and lacked the words – and energy – to argue over £1...worth it for the knowledge.  But rewarded with a ride in Eiffel's lift – and it really looks like the Eiffel Tower in the lift from my memory.  Up at the top, I notice that my hotel is practically the top of Lisbon – brilliantly situated.

Lisbon quite animated.  From here, I see the taxi rank – their green tops – oxidised copper colour forming a tasteful blob by the theatre.  Looking forward to tonight.  So, after walking down – good to see that the fire damage to the old part was not that bad – after buying some chestnuts (castanhas) – cold, some off – god knows what it'll do to my guts – but then I could do with losing some weight – I'm back in Pic-Nic, breathing in old smoke – which seems vaguely appropriate to Portugal, since everyone smokes, drinking milky coffee.  Why here?  Partly because the reasons for going elsewhere are not really good enough – i.e. being different for the sake of it – partly because this is the best place to watch the world – and the darkening skies – and to catch a taxi "home".  As ever, I'm glad to be going back – if only because I've really pushed myself these 48 hours, and am now exhausted.  

I wonder where the attractive young women of the Bairro Alto last night go during the day.  They ain't here…   Reminds me (lots of this) of the central square in Oslo, also of the Place de l'Opéra in Paris – with the theatre in the distance.  Lots of people with trannies around – must be football – my conning taxi-man had it on – in between ogling women as he drove.  But then he is his own punishment…

Archetypal Latins – smoke like chimbleys.  Brolly clutchers too – worse than Brits.  Chestnuts in Munich…  When putative Brits walk by, it is almost painfully obvious, with their pasty complexions.  Well, let's go the whole hog – having a port with my coffee – the latter being pretty horrible – if only to see what roadside port is like.  A generous measure – about double, 2.5 times UK.  A warm glow in the mouth and gullet.  It makes me feel positively eighteenth century – cf. Whigs and Tories.  A tradition I could get into the habit of – drinking port mid afternoon by the bucket… Particularly now that the air temperature is dropping.

Back to the hotel for a rest – and a shave, hoping to save time tomorrow.  Then in to town, to eat before the concert.  Along to the road on with the Coliseu finds itself – lots of fish restaurants – some almost empty – and this one, almost full (too full? - we're all cramped together, and the service is frayed) – but getting fuller too.  Many people out – a real contrast with the UK – Sunday is dead there.  Here it is almost the day out by the look of things. 

Strange to see the huge lobsters alive at the front, waiting for their turn – presumably.  I've just been shown my half – not too closely connected.  So the meal...well, the shrimp bisque a little watery, the  lobster (grilled) not as good as that in The Gambia.  Am I fated never to have a perfect meal here?  Cf. The fruits de mer at L'Huîtrière in Boulogne – now that was a meal and a half…

Interesting implements for eating: a hammer for breaking the shell.  [At times I take a perverse delight in my cacography – and in its wild curlicues – almost abstract on the page – especially with my ideography].  An interesting effect: because the lobsters are in a tank in the window, and we are below the tank, it seems that we are below the water too…  My expresso brings back memories of ...Sicily, and the Monreale Cathedral – a bar near there, lethal coffee and the standard glass of water…

60 minutes to go… (and I hope he does turn up…)

Among the lobsters, there is one top dog (sic) who sits @ the top of one of the two ladders:  will he/she be first/last to go (and parenthetically, where did this "@" lark start…?)

Could I stay on the road for a year, say? Εξαρτάται: I tend to drive myself when I'm away – and exhaust myself.  If I were away for longer, I'd have to ease up.  Is this Moody's Second or Third Law of Tourism?  [I also remember the curved road down from Monreale…]  A good sunset this evening, golds and mauves – made me think of Egyptian Romance, waiting for me.  

£40 for that?  But who cares?  I'm in the Coliseu – about 50 feet from the front.  Amazing place – holds 8000 they say – cheap seats, packed, the Plateia – where I am not – people smoking though – wooden floor, wooden seats – everything wooden – makes King's Cross look like a match.  Gob-smacking place – ten tiers then two tiers of boxes, plus one of standing at the top.  Only possible because I'm getting a 7.20am flight, unusually…  Fine royal box at the back.  I can see I have committed a solecism by not tipping the little man who showed me to my seat.

Lisbon airport 18.3.91

So here I sit at a rather quiet airport, having been woken from a very, very deep sleep at 5am.  Up quickly, a final farewell to the wonderful sights from my windows – San Gimignano again, of course – then by taxi here.

Great concert last night – even if it did end at 12.30am… leaving me precious little time to sleep.  The band was actually bass guitar (Richard?), drums (Ricky), guitar (…?), sax (Kenny), and keyboards (odd name) – all young players, all extremely good – plus MD.  I have never seen such authority on stage as when the man walked on in his black shades, platform heels, and black lame trousers – looking for all the world like the world-famous maestro he is.  His trumpet – miked by a kind of crook – a shocking red in places.

The music was – for want of a better term – jazz-funk – very hard-driven, lots of synth, lots of funky bass.  To begin, M. played with a mute – and the dusty, scuffed sound could be no one else's.  It was immediately recognisable from his recordings – and seemed produced without effort – the odd high note punched out in the sky.

Because of the miking he was able to start with his back to the audience, next to the drum kit, playing softly, very subtly.  Gradually he moved to the front, but in doing so, and in heating things up, he seem to dive down deeper and deeper into himself, bent double like a man in pain.  Must be damn difficult getting the breath control…

Then out came the mute, and more forthright playing – but all very placed, broken up.  And this would be the pattern of the evening, no excess – no sweat, literally, for him.  He left the pyrotechnics to his young bloods – and they provided it in abundance, roaring and squawking.  M.D. simply presided over it all, quite often playing with them – literally and metaphorically in a rather extraordinary way.

He would make them come to the front – like a teacher – and then play with - to - at - them, cajoling them, teasing them, provoking them.  They too bent slightly, as if in reverence, as if learning from the master.  Which they were.  And what a master.  He was a wise old lion prowling the stage, lashing out occasionally, growling sometimes, roaring at others.  His great mane/wig of hair – dyed, looking quite appropriate – gave him the air of some visitor from another planet, a mighty alien with the brain of a planet etc…  He simply dominated everything.  Whether he walked, stalked, stood, played, stayed – whatever – he just held the thousands there in his hands – with his instrument.  

[Some pretty stewardesses in their redcoats – so they exist…]

The music was OK – some drive there, but hardly inspired stuff.  Instead we came to see the man – to just be.  After all, a literal living legend – going back 40 years in jazz to the "Birth of the Cool" and beyond – and still there.  I feel privileged – and well pleased – to have seen him, given my late arrival at jazz.  At least I will be able to say: "of course, I saw Miles Davis live…".

A non-stop set of around two hours, the crowd well-behaved apart from a few nits calling out.  Bloke and woman either side of me smoking...odd effect: to look around the huge, dark hall and see firefly specks of burning cigarettes.  Also: to see the spotlights cut a swathe through the smoke, their beams like wedges.  But good (metaphorical) atmosphere.  Lovely venue – with its wooden floor, the acoustics are good - at least from where I was sitting, which was close.  I hope the whole thing doesn't burn down…

The set ended with Miles first playing slow and soft – again that dusky, dusty sound, that effortless sprinkling of notes.  Beautiful.  We went wild of course, and gave a standing ovation – but to the band, because Miles slipped off after a final uptempo number – and we had not realised our loss – symbolic?  The gig actually ended with a huge solo from the drummer – interesting way to sign off – this guy going bananas alone on stage, at the end of a long, late – great – night.  An experience I would not have missed for anything.

So, what else would I not have missed in these 48 hours or so?  Well, Lisboa herself, a real find – a place I would love to come back to.  A civilised weekend sort of place.  Also Portugal – I must return and sample the rest of it, I'm pretty sure there must be much that is unspoilt – scilicet the number of taxi drivers et al. who don't speak English – always a good sign.  Then of course the 46-year-old port, Santa Luzia, Bairro Alto – the fado, the bustle and 12 midnight.  San Jeronimo, the Bosch – and Miles, Miles, Miles.

My hotel is a find – brilliant location for the view – and cheap (cheaper than the bloody lobster, actually). [One thing I noted with Miles – his gammy right leg – he was limping quite visibly…]  One other fairly crucial thing I have gained is Portuguese – in the sense I feel that I could learn it quite quickly once my Spanish is up to speed.  And this in its turn means Brazil is opened up, and with it South America, which is great.  I also feel that a missing part of of the great jigsaw puzzle of Europe has been found for me – Portugal was always a nasty bite out of the Iberian Peninsular – a hole both geographically and metaphysically – I knew little of its history and culture.  Now I feel that everything's coming together a little more.

[I forgot the word for M.D.: magisterial.]

More destinations:

Wednesday, 3 June 2020

1995 Siena, Bagno Vignoni, Pienza

31.1.95 Siena

Sitting in "Il Palio" café – probably where I sat some 16 or so years ago.  Glorious view – clear blue sky, sun low with shadows long.  The harmony of this space: the buildings in all their disproportionateness, flow and rumple together.  Sitting by the fountain, children throw coriandoli (confetti).  One boy, typically Italian, with hard grey eyes, laughing.  Even the shop signs harmonious in their white on ochre.

Back in the Hotel Palazzo Ravizza (near Porta San Marco).  Lovely, old 18th-century palazzo – we have fine view south-west.  Tall room, narrow staircases, fading frescoes on the ceiling.  Outside, a grand piano in the library (hi, Venezia…).  Double doors – sporting the oak…

Wandering around the city.  Two things I remember: the main square (of course), climbing the tower and seeing its long shadow in the piazza below, and – crazily enough – memories of the square where the buses leave (I think – I also have a slight feeling that this was in Nerja…).  The Duomo I remember not at all; San Domenico, I recall better (but hideous).  The streets remind me of Bergamo (Alta), Urbino – and San Gimignano.  Especially the great high walls of the streets as they follow the roads.  And something I realised for the first time today – why these streets are so different: they are clothed entirely in stone, stone walls and stone pavements, and that there are no levels in the street -  which means that you walk along stone channels.

As dusk fell, so the Senesi appeared.  Few tourists in evidence here – why I love travelling at this time.

1.2.95 Siena

I lied: one other thing I remember from here: the entrance to the Pinacoteca, where we now are.  Bigger even than I remembered – nice to find the work of Sofonisba Anguissola.  The Domenico Beccafummi cartoons good.

In the piazza again: sun strong, air cool, happy buzz of people just sitting, talking.  A plane passes high overhead, a single prop swooping low round the space.  The reflected light of the Fonte Gaia shimmers on the marble (copies, but good enough).  The huge finger of the tower's shadow passes round the walls.  To the Café Victoria (tea room/American bar) for an overpriced cappuccino – but civilised surroundings – a bit like a café I recall in Bergamo (Città Alta).  Classic 12-bar blues in the background.

We finally find the Loggia del Papa – covered in scaffolding.  To the Campo, where the most delicate violet suffuses the western sky, and a sliver of moon hangs almost horizontally.  The ridiculous striped tower of the Duomo peeps over the girdling houses.  The sodium lamps look beautiful (or rather what their otherwise prosaic lights illuminate does).  Completely clear sky.  Magic.  One thing I can say: things here look different from what they were 16 years ago.  Then, everything was beautiful and strange; now they are beautiful and familiar.

To Osteria Le Logge.  Fine interior – one book on Primo Conti in the bookcase.  We have just moved – smokers joined us on our (big) table.  Wonderful making smokers unhappy…

2.2.95 Siena

To the Abbazia di Monte Oliveto Maggiore, with Signorelli and Sodoma.  Glorious countryside – hilltop houses, lines of trees – art in nature.  "Come benedetto riceve li due giovanetti romani mauro e placido" – a riot of colours and faces and forms – the distant landscape.  Church rather dull.

Bagno VignoniTarkovsky's Nostalghia (the church at the end is San Galgano).  Tiny village (no cars in centre).  There is almost nothing here: the baths, a square around them, hills, sun, sky, peace – my god, è bello qui… Down to the hot steam.  Greenish, with deposits everywhere.  Slight whiff of sulphur.  Glorious views – a handful of hilltop towns in the hazy distance.  A tower to the south, rolling bumpy hills everywhere.

To Pienza, rising through the perfect Tuscan landscape.  Sette Di Vino osteria – eating local pecorino et al.  Small, friendly.  The sun shining through the window.  Amazing, small, perfectly-formed classical town – that never grew.  Inside the Duomo – very sober, but very light (jet fighters screech overhead like devils).  Not very Italian, but nice – facade especially.  

To San Biagio – surely the most perfect church ever created.  The stone, living almost, bubbling in its stillness, that off-white/yellow/grey, the flecks and pocks like lived-in flesh.  The curves of the vault touch like figures in a geometric image.  Outside, in the sun, huge triglyphs, everything writ large and simple.  That stone.  Viva Sangallo.  The tiny rosettes on the external pilasters – that small, allowed vanity.  The balustrade – god's balcony over the altar…

In Al Marsili restaurant – couldn't eat – left rapidly – ill...

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Saturday, 18 April 2020

1987 Italy

30.8.87 San Gimignano

The sort of place you could spend a lifetime in – looking at every stone: The Stones of San Gimignano. Every part of every building seems to have a history: like Venice, where every stone is part of its palimpsest.  Everything has been fitted over, on top of, together: you can see windows filled in, old arches, lintel lines, roof hips.  And the vertical rules.  The towers: they are the essence of rectangularity, verticality.  Medieval they may be, but time has not softened their edges.  It is said they were built partly because of noble rivalry: that pride endures.  They conquer all horizontals; they lift the town.

The faces of the buildings are ancient, timeless and modern.  Ancient in that they are old and crumbling, weathered; timeless because they suggest granitic immanence; modern because their rich textured patchwork looks like nothing so much as some modern art – a sort of cross between a happier Soulages, the Boyle family, and Giacometti.  You could easily imagine them as cut up and hung on cool impersonal museum walls.  This denies their substantiality: they could be all surface, albeit with a rich impasto.  The piazzas become like those Western towns built for films: all facade.  Except that San Gimignano is, through its massive stony solidity, anything but surface.

Towers mean bells.  And bells are perfectly suited to a stone city.  It is the perfect hard acoustic, sending off scads of sharp reflections.  And against that sharpness there is the sheer unplaceability of the bell's tone.  We tend to forget that although bells were for centuries one of the few instrumental sounds, that sound is of an impossible richness.  The overtones cause the note to shift and sway dizzyingly.  And the physicality.  No other musical instrument requires so much effort, total bodily input.  And the striking of the bell is brute force: a literal blow.  Which makes it easy to attribute something magical to the disembodied sound which ensues.  Thor's hammer.  Watch the bells in the bell-tower: they loll like huge puppies' tongues, languorous.  The sight is as hypnotic as the sound.  San Gimignano is built for bells.  

You need the blue Tuscan sky to define the towers: it acts as a perfect seamless backdrop.  With clouds or any blur in the air you would lose that unique edge.  And you need the piazzas.  The towers loom from behind buildings.  Without open spaces height does not exist.  

In its medieval purity, San Gimignano is like Venice.  Apart from the postcards outside the shops, there is little to disturb the illusion.  There are no roads, just streets.  Cars are practically non-existent – making San Gimignano uniquely quiet – like Venice.  But San Gimignano has something that Venice can never aspire to: hills.  It is built on a hill and its streets wind and wheel away, up and down, taking the buildings with them.   

From the tower: roofs, harmonious yellows and ochres – everything very flat.  Sounds rising up from the piazzas which form gaping holes in the sea of roofs.  The herringbone patterns of the bricks look almost too neat.  There is a violinist with accompanying tape: his clear, acidulous tones cut through the hum of the town sounds.  Roundabout, a patchwork of rolling hills and fields.  And trees – woods, forests almost.  This is another Tuscany.  From the tower: people's verticality is emphasised: as in Florence, from Giotto's campanile.  Towers of San Gimignano answer this.  But with very little sensation of height.  That comes inside: there you have the fragile metal staircase, which maps out height.  It is also possible to see through it – so you are more conscious of being suspended in the air.

This is Benozzo Gozzoli's town.

31.8.87  San Gimignano

In the early morning, the low glancing light catches the rough face of the main tower.  The surface boils with rock and its texture. 

Most people know the Tuscany of Florence.  Some perhaps know the Prato-Pisa-Lucca railway line.  A world of neat but midday-dead stations; hot and dusty; airless cities sweltering in the Po valley.  There is another Tuscany, a hidden Tuscany.  It lies to the south, among the rolling hills and mountains.  It is not a flat, arid plain shimmering in the heat; scrubby vegetation on one-street town along the main routes.  Fields are hunched shoulders of land, their coarse rich earth ploughed in huge gobbets of mud; from a distance they look like crops of boulders.  Gaunt square farmhouses like castles stand in isolation amidst the fields, the land cultivated to the doorstep.  The roads are quiet and wind endlessly around hills.  Trees abound.  And along the way, as you pass ridges, there are hilltop towns hugging the rise of the land, spilling down slopes.  Volterra is the king of these,  San Gimignano the queen.

There are two main piazzas in San Gimignano: Piazza della Cisterna, and Piazza del Duomo, secular and sacred centres.  In both you need to be an artist to capture them, or even part of them.  The windows are stacked three or four high; they form a kind of contrapuntal essay, with now one, now another voice dropping out.  As the threads of the windows move round the square, so the tonality of the buildings changes: rusticated stone, brickwork, crumbling plaster, dark green creepers; but just as a fugue will modulate and vary its themes, so the essential, organic unity remains.  It is squares like these which rudely expose the crass insufficiency and poverty of modern buildings.  First, they lack detail, and in particular the human scale; secondly, they arrogantly fail to acknowledge their older neighbours.  Such discourtesy always gets its comeuppance.

Towers need piazzas: but piazzas benefit from local towers.  As the sun moves round, great slabs of shadow creep across ground and walls, varying the scene constantly.  And generally, the old stone facades turn like flowers in the sun, changing their face in response to the shifting angle.  Especially when the sun is high: all the joints and scars of the bricks and stones are picked out as if with black ink.  The scars of seemingly impossibly high buildings, testimony to the other one hundred or so towers that have been lost.  The verticality of the towers is emphasised because their lines descend fully to the ground.  Just as the height of Gothic spaciousness in cathedrals was achieved by running pillars from floor to ceiling in one long swoop.

San Agostino has the simplest possible brick exterior.  It is in a small hot square which gives back the heat San Agostino radiates.  Inside comes as a delicious shock: cool, slightly suffocating air, the smell of old incense, old wood, old religion.  Gozzoli rules OK.  The frescoes of Augustine are extraordinary.  Nearly invisible – especially in the neck-craning upper regions, in the small apse behind the altar are certainly some of his best works, and in expression and humanity rarely matched elsewhere.  Above all, it is the faces which linger: so completely personalised and individual.  Timeless and thus modern, surely they were all done from life.  And Saint Augustine himself: a noble-looking man – not your usual bumptious self-righteous prelate, or wimpy proto-martyr.  Thus San Gimignano matches (almost) the great frescoes of Arezzo.

The cloister of San Agostino is delightful – so nice to come across living green in this stony place.  Even the park at the Rocca is poor stuff. Here there is a rich privet hedge, four majestic trees, and Mediterranean palm trees.  Birds chirrup – no hunters here – and there are even huge dragonflies.  

Details: the front-on staring at us; the man with a canker and boil; the small dog.  And the men have shaved – real men.  And the last San Augustine: I have never seen anyone look so calm and mature – except perhaps in Michelangelo.  

Songbirds' cages fixed permanently to the wall – like prisoners exhibited – just food and water, no shelter.

San Agostino's bells – two completely out of sync – like a holy Steve Reich composition – only better.  The way they tail off – then the long plangent reverb. 

Room with a view.  The sun has started sinking westwards: my room faces east, and is now in the shade and delightfully cool.  Before me, the wonderful patchwork of irregular fields.  A noisy cranking combine harvester finishes off a field – most have already been ploughed up for next year.  Others are neatly planted with rows of various bushes.  Now the familiar Da Vinci sfumato thickens, casting a deepening haze over the landscape.  This morning it was real mist.  The sun, rosy-fingered dawn, lifted through it, sending huge horizontal rays between hills.  It reminded me of Kashmir

A musical city – for buskers, anyway.  Violinists, flautists – and now a virginalist.  This one in the courtyard to Museo Civico.  A delightful place: herring-boned bricks, frescoes everywhere.  And also a performance artists.  With whited face, and to the accompaniment of a rather random recorder, a youngish lady strikes a histrionic pose – and holds it for several minutes.  Her main achievement seems to be keeping her eyes open.  Ah, all this easy symbolism in a city barely changed for 500 years…

Sala di Dante – a good presence helped by old wooden furniture.  Lippo Memmi, a terribly stern Mary in state, with flocks of unbending saints around.  Rather Spanish.  The sprung floors bounce delightfully: truly a spring in your step.  In the pinacoteca, various Byzantinesque numbers: one by the "master of Clarissa" quite fine.  Other bits and bobs: two by Filippo Lippi, an unusual separated Annunciation in two tondos; a very Peruginoesque Pinturicchio – with 'orrible disembodied cherubs plus two quite impressive figures, a pope and a saint.  A Benozzo Gozzoli – rather dark – but the men's faces are individualised again.  Otherwise just anonymous lot vaguely connected with San Gimignano: Sebastiano MainardiMemmo di Filippuccio (what a name).  

Best of all is Taddeo di Bartolo's polyptych with San Gimignano himself.  Confidence is not inspired by the first scene: "during prayers San Gimignano is forced to leave the church for a call of nature; the devil, who is waiting for him outside, is driven away with a sign of the cross".  Some saint.  His other miracles seem to be driving out the devil from the Greek Emperor's daughter, an apparition of the Bishop of Ravenna, Saint Severus, at San Gimignano's funeral, and a couple of salvations from Attila the Hun.  Still, San Gimignano is only a small city…

At the northern corner of La Rocca, an old woman has a tiny, tiny house.  Outside, she has a small lemon tree.  It is all totally picturesque.  When she comes out, she glares at the tourists who presume to peep into her life.  As the sun sinks, the furrows in the fields deepen and darken; the chaotic and coarse tiles on the roofs echo; the contours of the land show themselves more fully.  

Even down San Matteo, traces of former glory remain: the impressive, monumental remains of a palazzo, scarred by all the siblings it has lost around it.  From the tower of the Palazzo del Popolo: Via San Giovanni and its smaller siblings cut through the roofs like clear swathes to the main gate.  I'm the last down from the tower.  Bells ring, voices command.  A warm evening breeze stirs.  At the bottom, the virginalist is still there.  Typically Italian: an Avanti-PSI festival, held in the entrance hall to the town hall, Piazza del Duomo.  

The best rear view of the towers is from La Rocca, at sunset.  As the sun sets behind the high hill to the west of San Gimignano, only the flat gaunt towers catch the light.  They shine out like slabs.  Their grey stone picks up every hue, and gradually turns pink.  And with the night, the swifts come out, like something out of Leopardi, swooping elegantly and unoriginally in the air among the towers and palaces.

1.9.87 San Gimignano

A different sunrise.  The sun comes up as a cool pink disc, turning paler as it rises through the bands of invisible clouds.  Great pools of mist hang in the valleys, making the most distant mountains white.  Cocks crow, but unlike yesterday, there is no morning chorus of dogs.  Smoke rising from odd fires throughout the landscape produce a white, coarser veil.  

The dogs have started, as have the bells.  Obviously very religious, these dogs.  The sun is now an almost perfectly white, perfectly round disc.

Piazza Luigi Pecori – nestling behind the big tower, alongside the duomo – a tiny haven of pure peace.  Yet more buskers – a plangent guitarist, with a shrouded harp in waiting – is there no limit to the varied musicality of this place?  It must be the stone: a perfect acoustic.  The Museo Etrusco.  Signposts on squared notepaper.  Handwritten notes of explanation stuck on with sellotape.  Italia, a roomful of paintings by "ignoti" – who clearly couldn't paint.  Long explanations about the Etruscan collection – mostly to do with who the superintendent was, all in long, flowing, parenthetical Italian prose.  Il Duomo – a very Catholic church.  Every surface within covered with gaudy frescoes and designs.  The arches black and white like La Mezquita.  A big Gozzoli – San Sebastian.  

Can you know a town?

I have a problem with experience: too easily it feels like a memory.

2.9.87 Volterra

Volterra is as if San Gimignano made the mistake of growing up.  It has the same impressive position, the same sense of antiquity – greater, since the Etruscans were here for centuries more.  But it is a dump.  All the grace has been worn out of it: instead, it is dusty, hot and smelly.  It surveys the surrounding landscape wearily.  The old Palazzo dei Priori is impressive in its gnarled glory: the square that surrounds it is fairly squalid.  The old duomo is gaudy inside and unspectacular outside.  The poor old battistero looks woebegone and battered.  Even the great Etruscan gate is rather pathetic: four stumps of worn stone.  The main pinacoteca is similarly threadbare – but provides a wonderful ambience for the motley collection of paintings.  Below a certain level early Italian renaissance stuff looks gawky and lurid.  The best things there were two Signorellis; but even these looked ill-proportioned.

As it turned out, the heart of the city lay in its Museo Etrusco.  On three floors and filled with an enormous collection of funerary monuments, it is a testament to the scale of Etruscan Volterra – over three times the size of the present-day town.  But however wonderful they are, you can only see so many.  Questions arise too: why are most of the inscriptions in Latin?  And why Latin myths?  Perhaps the best thing there was L'Ombra della sera: a curious, very thin statuette – with a face of extraordinary frank and childlike simplicity.  The description – as of a shadow before you – is d'Annunzio's. 

3.9.87 Montepulciano

If Montepulciano is hell, San Biagio is clearly a vision of a perfectly-ordered heaven.  This masterpiece is so unexpected, its clarity such a shock after Montepulciano: it is like a perfect exposition of classicism.  Half pillars and pilasters, various cornices to the windows – and all done out in the amazing, pitted, living stone.  The campanile fits snugly into one of the Greek cross's gaps; it too is perfectly balanced, standing miraculously as if held by magnetism there.  Inside is less spectacular.  Things have been spoilt somewhat by the over-ornate decorations over the altar.  Like San Giorgio Maggiore, pure cool simplicity is needed for such a building.  Externally, everything is on a massive scale: even the triglyphs.  Everything is perfectly proportioned: double cubes and a square cross.

Where San Gimignano appears finite and knowable, Montepulciano is like some maze, a monstrous joke on the hillside.  Getting in is no problem – but getting out is.  There are no roads, just paved streets; few signs; and everything is steep.  A crossroad may present you with a choice of five narrow paths.  Imagine this place in the rain, at night.  During the day it was deathly quiet.

Montepulciano itself seems attractive enough – an imposing situation, a neat main square (Piazza Grande).  But it lacks the purity of San Gimignano.  The palazzo municipale is of the standard Tuscan design.  Its chief point of interest is the tower.  You can go up inside – if you dare.  No modern appurtenances: it was like climbing back 500 years.  Rotten wooden rails, crumbling stairs, little light, old bricks.  Wonderful.  And the whole things was free.  You just walked in – past all the administrative offices, and up the stairs to the top.  The duomo had a unornamented west front, a bit like San Lorenzo in Florence.  Inside it was cool, bare and simple.  The square outside looked very suitable as a scene for the music festival.  Opposite the church, a loggia by Sangallo – obviously the patron artist of Montepulciano.  Quite a nice building – except that the man put square columns above round ones – which doesn't work.  

From Montepulciano to Lago Trasimeno.  Unfortunately, by now the weather had turned entirely to heat haze, with thunder in the offing.  The lake itself is not particularly impressive.  The surrounding hills are more so – though rather obscured.  The general effect is of an enormous pond.  But pleasant enough to have a cappuccino or two by.

For the drive back, mostly mini-motorways – no crash barrier, which is disconcerting – especially as I passed one car which seemed to have managed to end up on the wrong side.  Soon the rain came.  Great big splodges of it.  This suddenly made all those boring signs about "pericolo in gelo o in pioggia" terribly relevant.  My entire route seemed to be filled with them.  But worse was the lightning.  This was none of your namby-pamby British "one clean bolt and let's call it a day".  This stuff forked around the sky – horizontally even.  And I was climbing up the landscape in my little tin car.

I obviously made it, but it was interesting.  As was the view from my balcony when I got back.  The eastern part of the Tuscan hills from San Gimignano were laid out before me.  A huge thick pall hung over it.  Great nets of lightning – often multiple – flickered over it all like a serpent's tongue.  You could see how myths were formed.  It looked like El Greco's picture of Toledo.

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