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~ The Home Pub of the Famous Pink Drinks and Trotter's Ale

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Monthly Archives: December 2012

The vertical Food Phenomenon

15 Saturday Dec 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 25 Comments

The vertical Food Phenomenon

December 13, 2012

depositphotos_3298753-Delicious-salmon-on-plate-decorated-with-salad-cheese-and-seafooThe vertical Food Phenomenom.

Santa has come early at the hardware-trade, at least here in Mittagong. Driving back late from Sydney, a large solar driven multi coloured sign heralded that ‘face painting’ would be a daily event at Bunnings together with ‘cooking lessons’. You would have to give it to them. Such entrepreneurial spirits flashing every few seconds. Who would have thought hardware shops would give cooking lessons? It is not as if cooking food has been put on the backburner, and people are just eating cold cabbage with tripe.

You only have to turn on the TV, morning or night, to hear and see someone holding up some latest morsel, glistening with juices and with contrasting colours. The cook or taster pronouncing…’oh, yum’ with ‘oh…wow’ second and a somewhat lamer third coming in at ‘how nice’.

I have yet to hear oh… how fucking awful, or even oh yuck, while heaving and retching! Surely, sometimes the result is not up to scratch and the viewer would be so much happier, if, just sometimes, the culinary result was less than planned like the viewers own efforts in the caesarstone kitchen with the multi story oven.

Just consider how on TV cooking is often done under the most harrowing conditions.  Last week on TV a dish was cooked in the middle of a raging Mekong river on a rickety boat and with just one small hardly flickering little flame in the middle of a torrential monsoonal downpour… Yet, the result was stunning and again it was held up as a trophy of cooking art regardless or perhaps because of those dire adversarial circumstances.

The viewer could not but become deeply depressed with their own miserable result of a limp pale yellow poached egg staring at them on a piece of toast which was only just made edible by scraping the charcoal off. No, “oh yum”. Not even a single “how nice’.”

How disconcerting it is for us, salivating viewers, to then, often within the same hour, advertisements are shown urging us to give generously to World Vision. The tearstained mother holding up a dying baby, children reduced to eating crispy insects to just stay alive another day. It would be so much better and more sensitive if those ads were shown during that Ancestry.com ‘where do you come from’ programs, together with funeral insurances enticements. How glorious that elderly couple beam at us. They are so happy with their funeral ‘plan’ while their well fed grand-daughter stares out from the top of a bridge over the expanse of a lovely flowing river. Her life is just starting but ours might need a coffin ‘plan;’ but look, we are still living it up to the hilt! But… we don’t want to burden anyone with our funeral. Geez, what would our kids do without us having a plan; bury us in the back-yard?

The cooking program also often shows us food precariously stacked upwards, like a block of home units. Why does it have to be vertical? Are we running out of space? Is this what overpopulation has caused? Or is it because the top layer is closer to our mouth? Everything has to be so effortless lately; perhaps lifting the spoon up is now being investigated by the cooking moguls.

Easy does it. It is the same with the modern cloth line. All clothes have to be taken off the line with one magic swoop. Rrrrt it goes and the washing line is empty ready for the next run.  Very tempting this is, with time so short and busy mothers and (some fathers) driving kids to schools, ballet, and flute and sax lessons. It all has to be so very Rrrrrt now and in split second timing.

Anyway, Bunnings has weighed in with also giving cooking lessons, competing with the outside Barbeque sausage sandwich stall run by the Lions Club. Perhaps it is to entice the sale of outdoor kitchens. Has anyone seen the latest of those? Enormous outdoor stainless steel kitchens costing as much as houses, are now up for sale. They include water taps, rotisserie, and fridge with ice making and fish scaling capability, a fiery turbo driven stone lined pizza oven and ample storage to hold the suckling pig.

I am still getting over assembling a modest two burner affair some years ago. Boy, did it have many nuts and bolts with matching Allen key. It took me 12 hours and had to turn the whole contraption upside down to retrieve a single nut that had fallen in a steep crevice behind one of the burners. Finally a team of mental health experts overseen by a crack psychiatrist were called in to counsel me while I was finishing the job.

It seems that eating is now a disorder for more than a million Australians. Binge eating and binge starving is now all the go. We just don’t seem to be able to get our eating habits right. Yet, it used to be so simple.

We ate to survive.

Tags: Australia, Bunnings, Mekong, Mittagong, Santa, Sydney, Vietnam, World Vision

Must be the 60’s – This week it’s Beat

14 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms, Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 20 Comments

Tags

1960s hits, Beat music

Algy beat 1

Playlist by Algernon

Last Christmas I had a look at ‘70’s music year by year as well as some of the television of the time. This year I thought I might look at the music of the 60’s. This time around though, I’ll look at specific popular music genres. For the first I’ll look at Beat music.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-hL7ryCy3Y

Glad all over – Dave Clark Five

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BCBMjgnVTgQ

The Cruel Sea – Billy J Kramer and The Dakotas

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZR-f10Z2iB4

I’m telling you know – Freddie and the Dreamers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSm0M-BbVdY

A hard day’s night – The Beatles

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOYOJAczH0k

I like it – Gerry and the Pacemakers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=juzm3BRksf0

Don’t let the sun catch you crying – Gerry and the Pacemakers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lv8k0VI9tBc

Mrs Brown you have a Lovely daughter – Herman’s Hermits

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Reqc38YW81w

No Milk today – Herman’s Hermits

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=It75wQ0JypA

Bust Stop – The Hollies

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1HylIjQt-Y

I’m alive – The Hollies

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aog_jgCUJTw

The Fortune Teller  – The Merseybeats

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pyj2qL-bQ4E

Silence is Golden – Brian Poole and The Tremeloes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypv1lZlW1WY

Needles and Pins – The Searchers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04Loo99IUUA

The Hippy Hippy Shakes – The Swinging Blue Jeans

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5IRI4oHKNU

She’s not there – The Zombies

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6LVI1gDswg

Keep on Running – Spencer Davis Group

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrQ4UGIPphk

Baby can I take you home – The Animals

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmYo0ZRpOgo

Go Now – The Moody Blues

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0YifXhm-Zc

She Loves you – The Beatles

Wilson: An Adventure in Culture

13 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Sandshoe

≈ 61 Comments

Tags

Ngaruawahia, Pohutakawa, Tawhaki, Tiki

shoe Identitytimefilterframereduced

Story and Illustration by Sandshoe

Tiki is a revered Polynesian symbol of the beginning of time, evidence of a genesis; recognisable in jade, bone, ironstone and green plastic.

Living in Takau Street in Auckland I walked the slope of the hill into the city to buy mussels for steaming and bananas, yams and taro. The culture new and heady had the background song of the Polynesian congregations in local churches and at Christmas time the nativity. The vaporous steam and the delicious smells of the cooking later lead me to buy bamboo steamers that would throw a lid off as the shell of the mussels burst open and revealed their succulence. There in Takau Street, in the bungalow in a distinctive row of them on stilts, I became aware one week-end day of an assembly of Polynesian men laughing and jostling between them a squealing pig up the steep climb alongside the side division fence of corrugated iron. I assumed one of them sliced the pig’s throat open.

Much later when I learn Ruth Park had lived in Takau Street, it assumes a folkloric quality for me as if I had walked on hallowed ground.

Walking anywhere, I looked for the Pohutekawa tree and mixed it with the Feijoa because of the red blossoms. I think I will never see once I learned of the legend of the Pohutekawa Tree a more important tree in its impact, its story, in my consciousness of cultural difference, the importance of access to story telling and a nation’s symbols, legends, a people’s heritage.  It is replete with stories in Maori culture, as many possibly as one for each of the magnificent fiery red blossoms it flourishes in full flower. The pohutakawa was the first tree I knew in New Zealand in that it grew ancient and giant like in the front yard of the home which was my family home there with my then-husband and our children. My favourite image of the pohutakawa tree is from children’s books in which the roots of the tree allowed Tawhaki, the warrior, access to the land from a subterranean reality, an under-world.

I eventually became alone in an emotional sense in a culture that grew on me by a kind of osmosis of understanding, a hunger to understand, to recognise the symbols. Searching for the musical notes, the sounds, I read in the city library from a reference book about early Maori flutes and amazed at the variety of sizes and configuration in detailed plates of drawings.

Turning to the culture of the Europeans I read in a local council library a first hand account of the end of the Maori Wars written by a land agent established by the British Government. It surprised me for its empathy and most that I mastered the placename and remain captivated by it, Ngaruawahia, designated home of the Maori King established to meet the spokespersons for the British Queen Victoria.

I stumble in the local library on the story of Governor King at Norfolk Island who was ordered by the British Government to capture two Maoris and return with them to Norfolk Island to garner the secrets of flax growing and processing. The Governor hearing the plaintive song one sang in the evenings came to recognise grieving. To simplify; he had the men dine with him, created the rudiments of a Maori-English dictionary and returned them, against the orders of the British Government, to the location from where he had stolen the men. Claimed is that when a British boat returned to the location, local people ran to meet it shouting “Kingi”.

When I returned to visit New Zealand in recent time I embarked on a pilgrimage to the library. I am sure it is a worthy library. For my part, I could no longer recognise it, large, impersonal and nobody was recognisable, or immediately able to identify an “old book based on a University generated thesis or by a lecturer, about Governor King”. Pity nevertheless I could not find the text in the time available to me and short of resources. The story I read would make an excellent film, whatever basis for it might be established through detailed research.

Do I imagine it was claimed the author was discredited in his time or scoffed at but anyway, I settled in a library chair with a collection of short stories for old time’s sake.

When I lived in New Zealand, I was desperately hungry when I discovered their power, for short stories by New Zealand authors. Frank Sargeson emerges wry and friendly. I imagine him down to earth and perfectly accessible to an inner circle. Janet Frame who I had not heard of and I cannot understand why sweeps me off my feet with her short story, You Are Now Entering The Human Heart, about a teacher who drapes a snake around her shoulders. Frame published it in America first, I am sure I read that and it exemplifies for me living an existence that feels estranged in one’s native country. Driven by that understanding, I consider I would like to have the poem I wrote, The Horse, published in the Dari language and distributed in Afghanistan and Pakistan. I believe it would be instantly appreciated, understood, find its admirers, be taken into the human heart in the Islamic culture of the region.

Lit by the torch of discovery so many writers in their culture in New Zealand told stories of elements I had begun to sense as migrant, nevertheless as an outsider and but felt isolated with, I consumed Dan Davin, Stead, Morrissey, Patricia Grace, the Maori writer Witi Ihimaera and on it went, in an immersion in the first class writers that have sprung out of the dynamic environment, the fascination that is the colour, smell, sights and sounds of Aotearoa, The Land of the Long White Cloud. The cloud is a persistent and recurrent configuration that evidences itself as a characteristic roll like a bed roll, like a chastity roll, like a round Japanese pillow to rest the neck on if only it were possible. It has to be seen to be understood for its power as a symbol of the country we know more commonly as New Zealand.

Land and sky, tree and mountain, cloud and formation in misty and re-formative shaping that is easily perceived and naturally incorporated into the soul are everything in the story telling.

When I worked subsequently for a juncture at the offices of the New Zealand Herald as a copy holder I was one of the staff employed to read The New Zealand Listener on contract. Here was access to the copy of some of the greatest of the contemporary short story writers published in New Zealand. I thrilled to the quality of what I was holding at first hand.

One of the regular political columnists to the Listener presented copy as a veritable rant of passionate declaration. She threw fact and raw opinion together with what looked like an ultimate faith in the editorial resources at her disposal. Thus I learned her column was what was left after the reduction of her copy, in my opinion brilliantly, by the editorial staff assisted by the Readers Department; sometimes from as many as 5 intensely and minutely hand written pages to 2. The published segments were lifted directly out of the text nevertheless with the barest alteration. I was privy to the emotion behind the scenes, the pulse of an environment at the heart of contemporary culture.

My marriage had meanwhile irrevocably broken down.

It was very much later I privately lampooned (in the doodle published here) myself in a hostesses uniform, hostess of myself, searching for identity. The allusion is to the attention to detail and money spent on the design of uniforms, which came to my attention in relationship with a one-time clothing manufacturer and designer who was brought to New Zealand by the government to assist establish the clothing industry in the 1950s, the industry it became, which was leading edge. One of his claims about his (spectacular) career was he had in one year designed the Air New Zealand hostess uniforms. I tried my hand at designing my own.

‘W’ is, of course, the initial of my surname. It is homage to a former lover who depicted himself in a cartoon thinking – at a job interview – “I wonder what Wilson is doing”.

I was caught up in another culture and travelling one of the hardest roads, almost too lonely to travel home alone.

Vale Ravi Shankar

12 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

ravi shankar

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-12-12/ravi-shankar-reportedly-dead/4424116

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KXk_8_8oLY

The Bakery: Let the Sunshine In – Aquarius

10 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 227 Comments

Tags

Aquarius, Lehan Winifred Ramsay, Let the Sun Shine In, The Bakery, The Fifth Dimension

lehan TheBakery

Painting and Song Choice by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

Fondant with Fire and a surprised Rooster

10 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

Douwe Egberts, Fire, Fondant, White Christmas

Fire with Fondant and a surprised Rooster

December 8, 2012

220px-Candle_on_Christmas_tree_3

One of those memories that seem to hover around in my obstinately persisting recollection of childhood events is the loveliness of a ‘White Christmas.’  Christmas is so soon after the celebration of St.Nicholaas, (the National typical Dutch event whereby kids behave, but only till they receive their presents, after that it is back to normal and they run riot again), that as with many childhood memories, they often get mixed up or somewhat embellished.

For me, the White Christmas was always tinted and coloured by an event, which would have to be one of the most bizarre that any child could ever have hoped for in experiencing. As our lives unroll and routine sets in, it could be said that a kind of yawning repetition at times takes over, hence the relying by me anyway, on seeking respite in childhood events. Here is just one of those. Enjoy.

It could never be claimed that my dad was a cook or that domestic duties came naturally to him. He worked, smoked his Douwe Egberts rollies, sat in his ‘easy chair’ and mum had the kids and cooked. However, there was one level of cooking which he excelled in, even though he practiced this just one day a year. It was the art of making a sweet that used to adorn our Christmas tree and from memory was called fondantjes.  They are a kind of icy sugary sweet which is infused with a strong rather delicate taste of, in our Dad’s culinary efforts, almond and lemon essence. My dad had perfected this sweet into an art form and he never deserted or diverted away from this. Almond and lemon essence ‘fondantjes’ it would be and it is now etched into my memory as clear as the smell and taste of ‘pepernoten’ at Sinterklaas. Almost as defining of whom I am as the rest of the debris of past experiences.

The making of the fondantjes was, as far as I can recollect,  my dad standing in our kitchen  mixing up  sugar, lots of it, with butter into a slurry into which ,like a magic sorcerer’ he would add the almond and lemon essence. The lot was re-stirred, heated and poured into many different metal shapes with holes in the middle. Those metal shapes were, like the rest of the Christmas paraphernalia kept in a box underneath my parents’ bed. I know this because as a kid I was insanely curious about the world I happened to be born into and used to spy around our family house hoping to find magic and secret discoveries of some forbidden kind giving, hopefully, some meaning to my life. Together with the metal fondant moulds under my parents’ conjugal bed were also collections of metal spring loaded clips which would be used to clamp real candles onto the spruce tree.

The Christmas tree in Europe is or was real spruce and not mere pine. Now-a-days they are most likely to be those universal type trees of which we screw in metal branches, stored in flat packs while not in use. Everything gets debased and becomes so much uglier as the years go by. I noticed a new updated version. It works like an umbrella. Just push a button and the tree pops up, decorations and all!

On Christmas Eve, dad ceremoniously and with some typical Dutch paternal authority would announce for us kids to assemble in the lounge room as he would now put up the tree with the hanging of decorations, the kids would be needed to hang the fondantjes. Remember they were poured into those metal containers with a hole in the middle? Of course, none were to be eaten. What parent would set children to task dealing with the most aromatic and sweetest of sweets delights and not eat them, I ask? Well, we were allowed to lick the slurry pan’s remnants. Some consolation! He was a good dad.

The idea of hanging the fondant was to hide them as much as possible amongst the dense branches of the spruce-tree; nothing must come too easy, a valuable lesson for the future. After the fondant came the decorations and the candle clips with the specially bought candles that would fit into the designated hole of the clip, the same as the strings for hanging the fondant were threaded through their holes.  All were suspended from this glorious laden Charismas tree.

The desired ‘white Christmas’ happened often. Of course we are talking pre-climate change. Then, Christmas morning were always announced by stillness. Snow was the perfect sound insulator; all was muffled, including the cuckeldee-doo from the Leghorn rooster down at ground zero below us, adding to a special reverential atmosphere. The authentic spirit of Christmas. It took some heroic acceptance years later to admit that, bogong moths, the bikini Bondi surf and the all pervasive smell of stale beer with simmering heat above the susburban asphalt were part of a different Christmas, just as valid (but not quite as lovely for me yet.).

The deliverance of the fondant sweets was carefully arranged to last as long as possible and at least as long as the Christmas tree would remain green. A strict rationing was in order. Why not? So many foodstuffs just after the war were still rationed and still needed coupons in exchange. As kids we were happy to have warm socks, bread and both parents to tuck us into a warm bed. The Christmas sweets were an undreamed of luxury.

Of course, as the fondants got eaten, carefully and at pre-determined times, the tree all lit up by burning candles still managed to hide remnants of those desirable sweets; they never would stale!  But…one day as the tree yellowed and the candles started to burn ever downwards towards their stumpy ends, one of those greedily licked around the bone dry turpentine loaded twig with needles and within seconds our glorious tree caught fire.  Total mayhem. My father looked on in total astonishment. This was totally unordered and not allowed in Holland as if this alone would temper the fire and all would come good on its own accord. It did not.

As my father spent precious seconds in total inaction, the tree still loaded with the fondant did not. It soon became more than a serious incendiary device, ready to engulf all and everything in its path. Time was of the essence now. Just when everything seemed doomed my dad regained the initiative and sprung into ‘action man’, became the predecessor of Batman.

His eyes, something I’ll never forget. My instant Rin Tin Tin hero- man. He opened both windows with one mighty movement in one arm and with the other, with split second precision, grabbed the burning tree, and, (Werner Von Braun would have been so proud)’ hurled the tree like a V2rocket spearheading down to ground zero, fondant and all. He saved our family. Sure there were some protesting cacklings and consternations from the chooks down below. It wasn’t every day that a burning tree would end up in their coup and the rooster did have some singed feathers, but so what.

Dad had saved our family. My hero!

Tags: Douwe Egberts, Fire, Fondant, Tobacco, White Christmas Posted in Gerard Oosterman | Edit |   4 Comments »

The Enmore December 6

07 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms, Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Blondie, Enmore Theatre, Machinations, The Stranglers

Algy Enmore Theatre

Playlist by Algernon

Here’s one for the superannuated Punks. On Thursday Therese, FM, Algernonina the Elder and I went for a big night out to the Enmore to see Blondie, The Stranglers as well as The Machinations. Here’s a selection of their tunes.

The Machinations

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3y5Ru76ce6Q

Pressure sway

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3dDRQRFDbu8

No say in it

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HqEioAE01Kw

My Hearts on fire (sorry about the ending)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OW0o8BBvv_c

You got me going again

The Stranglers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2B4bsqYxwo0

No more heroes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7R7q1lSZfs

Golden Brown

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=si2kis6lWRg

Hanging around

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XF3P4AAaVIg

Peaches

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFmGV_UY548

Strange little girl

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqd9oWSqWIE

Skin Deep

Blondie

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGU_4-5RaxU

Heart of Glass

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aH3Q_CZy968

Call Me

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWhkbDMISl8

Hanging on the telephone.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXX8rUV4p9A

Mother

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0skjm-uJSs

Tide is high

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qW6OrdLkCLU

Atomic

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hvqgb1D6Opw

Union City Blue

 

In Excess at Christmas

07 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

Christmas, Danish, Noel, Pavlova, Silent Nigfht

In Excess at Christmas

December 6, 2012

Christmas-Shopping

In Excess at Christmas;

With Christmas around the corner, could we just heed an item in the news last week whereby it was forecast that billions will be spent on food but billions of food will also be thrown away. I know, I know; we make this commitment each year to be frugal, when we peer into the garbage bin and see a 5kg still laden ham bone sticking out together with redolent off prawns and tons of potato salads, not forgetting the Danish smoked salmon, the stale cashews and rotting fruit heavy Pavlova. We will be better next time. But are we?

Already the pace in shopping centers is increasing. Some are starting the running of the shoppers early and show a nervous tension as if things could run out at any moment.  Yesterday I watched the first pre-Christmas smacking by an overwrought mother of a child who was clinging onto some gold glitter wrapped item without even knowing what was in it. Christmas brings out the worst in us. Give another couple of weeks or so and the sound of slapping will be reverberating around the shopping malls of Australia. Otherwise placid, church going and peaceful mothers will give the two finger salute to other mothers fighting over a parking lot and shopping trolleys will be rammed into the shins of the elderly not quite up to speed shopping. It all becomes so bewildering for them, yet, no mercy.

The PA sound systems will be blaring out the usual “Silent Night-Holy Night” and, time permitting, anxious mothers will put their little ones on a multitude of Santa knees, whom, with all the peados around, are now thankfully mainly females. You can never be careful enough and Santas are not above being shysters as well. A couple of years ago over a hundred  Santas were arrested in Ohio being drunk and causing affront, while in Amsterdam 2 females dressed in Santa suits were helping themselves to Ipads and jars of pickled herring. Wasn’t there a Santa who held up a yacht club in Rose Bay a couple of years ago or was that in Fremantle?

While Christmas for some might be about giving and sharing goodness and sweetness, for many it is also a period of high stress and upheaval. The expectations are so overrated, not least by the continuous bombardment of advertising jingles; Noel and Noelll, Noeeeelwell….and…. Noeeeewelll it shrieks on and on. The fake snow on all that plastic and golden glitter, mustn’t forget the Symphony brand toilet paper especially  now with all the food and lobsters.

Thank goodness for Rudolf and the relief of a Shiraz red nosed reindeer at the end of another trying day…That’s another area of over-shopping but at least with beverages, they keep and with luck might even improve with age, especially those cheeky and ambitious little numbers that are imbued with improvement as the years go by. Unlike us revelers, who generally don’t improve with getting older. Just as well a beverage comes in liquid form, and thankfully don’t need chewing teeth like the Christmas prosciutto or the tenacious turkey.

We don’t want to be seen as stingy and rather pack in more than less in the trolley, thereby setting up the scene to peer into the garbage bin in a few weeks time staring at all the waste. Why is it that even though we swear in keeping the ‘making amends’ promises each year, to do things better, we fail with those made around the Christmas-New Year period?

We need to calm down and start walking slowly. Stop running. All will come good again. Remember, the shops are only closed for Christmas day and after just two days we can, en masse, return items that we don’t want or were given by those that normally don’t care a hoot but like the sheep we seem to turn into at the festivities, don’t want to be seen as being outside the ‘norm’. As if we haven’t behaved normal to our fellow human beings at other times…

I could be wrong but, thankfully, it seems that giving presents has abated the last few years. For kids perhaps it is still important but presents for adults are being eschewed. It is just not ‘in’ anymore. No wonder the shops are hurting but what can one do?

All my best wishes for you all, but…oh, for a Silent Night- Holy Night with real snow and less plastic.

Mr Leydon

06 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Sandshoe

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Christina Binning Wilson, lift, lift and separate

shoe elevator machinery 2

1920s Lifting Gear

An Uplifting Story by Sandshoe

“You alright this morning, mate?”

He explained.

“We’ll get someone to look after it. Won’t be long”

“How long would that be? Long, the time I mean? How long?”

He remembered he opted for supposing it would be looked after. The answer to his question how long was a retreat of crackling vowels and consonants jumbled in an echo of archaic concrete and metal pipes humming a low tone through the speaker phone in the basement. Even the intercom was a hangover of twenty years.

Not even a pack of cards to play Patience. A gust of sighed air that frightened him for its despair disappeared into the bright light.

He considered the light above him in its exposed recess. When this happened the last time, the week before, the lift had shuddered to its stop and the light went out. He was really frightened then, banging with his right fist on the black for a door he had walked towards with his other arm extended in front of his body, the tips of his fingers stretched until they scraped abruptly on its surface.

Ironic he considered ‘lift’ was the heading on the memo on his desk, yes, inclusive of the carefully dug out (scratched on and doodled) single inverted commas glaring at him yesterday morning when he arrived for work. He didn’t follow up after the short exchange with maintenance. He was late. The bus broke down at the outskirts of the park. Breathing the steady moment as he called overcoming stress, he walked but unsure of the time it might take to negotiate the race barricades dragged across the side streets. He had feigned indifference at the foot of the step of the bus to the exhortations of a feral passerby he should get a life.

How can we tell where and for what reason an incident might lodge in the brain and restore itself in a broken shard he thought. He recalled yesterday again, rounding the corner into the stairwell at the back of his building, the man approaching him from the other side of the rubbish bin and motioning with two upheld fingers, a v-shape towards his lips, his right eyebrow arched.

Not that it was his building. He detested these intrusions of thought. They flickered in intransigent patterns, entirely irrelevant. He shook his head. He walked into the lift that day without thinking about what he was doing yet had vowed to not ride it. Punching the bundy he derided you could say he forgot.

Sound seemed to come even from the opposite direction to the noises that swallowed the retreating voice when maintenance told him wouldn’t be long. He imagined that he supposed.

He shifted his weight and wondered how long had he been standing in the position he assumed. Habit meant he executed a turn as he always did after walking into the lift and pressing the floor button he wanted. He ended facing the door in a stance of readiness to exit. The optimism of that repeated movement seemed foolish.

Habit meant he lifted as well the wrist he always lifted to check the time on his wrist watch. The cuff of his shirt lay perfectly flat where his watch would usually be revealed each morning as the lift ascended to his floor. He didn’t have his watch. He saw in a moment the pin that secured the band on the ceramic tiles of the ground floor men’s rest room. The allergy cream he worried would stain his shirt only smeared a light trace of an oily substance on the cuff seam. He stared at the fabric, making purpose that was useful out of lifting his wrist. Realisation was haunting him he had not considered the pin belonged to his own watch band. He tapped at the sleeve realising his error, re-viewed the shine on the end of the pin against the rough grouting. Panic rolled in a wave from the tip of his toes through his stomach to his throat.

Where the watch might be took precedence over thinking about how long he had been waiting. His eyes watered. Out of a swirl of red colouration and shallow breaths he felt defenceless. He recalled the camera and looked up to the flickering expulsion of red light overhead. Security might not be esconsed in his office, drinking the mug of coffee so large he wondered the man could walk a straight line, least year after year walk the crooked walk keeping him resolutely grabbing at vulnerable juniors. He protected the man by doing nothing. It was out of fear of his own secrets.

In the meeting in the afternoon, Jon interrupted Dave with a flourish of his hand and the retort he didn’t think it was a good thing they lost the account. Dave had snapped it doesn’t matter.

“Of course it matters!” he said aloud, “It bloody matters.”

He returned to the buttons and pushed the alarm. He was having a panic attack, quietly perhaps but nevertheless. He had forgotten the alarm.

If his mother were alive she would call the garment his friend in the new office was wearing a cardie and discuss with him how attractive he had thought him in the pink stretch top flattering the below knee grey skirt. His eyes across the room moved from the match of the sensible slim line flat shoes and simple white-blonde shoulder length wig. He saw close later he had beautiful blue eyes.

How he got the job was easy. He recounted he got sick of the daytime soapies and laughed his endearing guffaw. End of day he got to the stage he had to tape episodes to get the housework done before his ex-wife came home. Started with a girl he went out with. He corrected himself. Woman.

“Twiddled my thumbs at first,” he said, “because her sitting in front of the box episode after episode bored me.”

He sat on the floor of the lift. He sat by shuffling backwards and leaning, sliding his shoulder blades in contact with the wall down its length until his behind touched the floor. Motionless, he squatted with his head bent back, rigid until the desire to sit took over. He stretched one aching leg forward and then the other in a gesture of defeat and collapsed, limp, his head lolling forwards.

“Mr. Leydon?”

The intercom spluttered into a crackle of pattering, scattering sounds like a dozen mice scratching at the glass cage in the research laboratory downstairs. When he worked in the laboratory he took the sweeping reach of broad and comforting stairs with the carved rail firmly in his grasp.

“Mr Leydon? Nobody’s in yet. I can’t get maintenance. I do know the electrician is sick today. Rumour had it he was going to watch the race from home instead of here. Mr Leydon, I’m sorry.”

He raised his head slowly, staying alive he considered and wiped his face with the back of one hand, then with its palm and the other hand, careful, avoiding the stiff cuffs of his sleeves by elevating his forearm. He felt like a cat.

“Mr Leydon?”

Vale Dave Brubeck

06 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Dave Brubeck, jazz, John Paul, Time out

untitledDave brubecxk

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-12-06/jazz-great-dave-brubeck-dead-at-91/4411626

Jazz pianist Dave Brubeck, whose experiments in rhythm and style helped win millions of new jazz fans around the world, died overnight of heart failure at the age of 91.

Brubeck, who was a day away from his 92nd birthday, died in a Connecticut hospital on Wednesday, according to his manager Russell Gloyd.

Brubeck won a slew of awards over the course of a career that spanned more than six decades. He was still playing as recently as last year.

He played at the White House for presidents and visiting dignitaries, and was designated a Living Legend by the US Library of Congress.

Brubeck’s 1959 album Time Out became the first million-selling jazz record of the modern era, as songs Take Five and Blue Rondo a la Turk defied the indifference of critics to become classics in the genre.

A big party had been planned for Sunday to celebrate Brubeck’s 92nd birthday, Mr Gloyd said.

But on Wednesday he felt ill. His son called for an ambulance and Brubeck was taken to the emergency room.

“They came up later and said ‘we just can’t keep this heart going’,” Mr Gloyd said.

Brubeck’s success cemented his reputation as one of the great proponents in the history of jazz, after years of nudging the music into mainstream culture by relentlessly performing on university campuses.

His Dave Brubeck Quartet also toured the world on behalf of the US government, becoming so popular in Europe and Asia that it was said that when Washington needed to fix relations somewhere, they sent in Brubeck.

According to Brubeck’s website, highlights of his career include the premier of his composition Upon this Rock for then-pope John Paul II’s visit to San Francisco in 1987.

His accolades included receiving the National Medal of Arts from then-president Bill Clinton in 1994, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

He held numerous honorary doctorates from universities in the United States, Canada, Britain and Germany.

Over the course of his career he also experimented with integrating jazz into classical forms.

In 1959 his quartet played and recorded with the New York Philharmonic under Leonard Bernstein, and a year later he composed Points on Jazz for the American Ballet Theatre.

Born on December 6, 1920 in Concord, California, a four-year-old Brubeck was improvising tunes from the classical pieces he was taught by his piano teacher mother.

But he dreamed of being a rancher like his father, and went to university to become a veterinarian, only to transfer to the music department when a teacher noticed he spent all class staring out the window at the conservatory.

Video:          Dave Brubeck – Take Five

Raw skill

Brubeck’s raw skill at the keyboard concealed the fact he had not yet learnt to read music, and he was allowed to graduate in 1942 only after promising never to become a music teacher.

After World War II, Brubeck studied with French classical composer Darius Milhaud, who told him jazz was the best music for expressing the spirit of the US.

He began his career in earnest in 1947, playing in San Francisco for the first time with Paul Desmond, whose delicate lyricism on alto sax would later help make the Brubeck quartet famous.

After nearly becoming paralysed in a 1951 swimming accident, Brubeck assembled his first quartet with Desmond and built up a new and young audience by relentlessly touring universities at the suggestion of Brubeck’s wife Iola.

Jazz Goes to College in 1954 sold more than 100,000 copies and led to Brubeck becoming the first jazz musician ever to appear on the cover of Time magazine.

Brubeck learned about the issue from his idol Duke Ellington, who showed up at his hotel room with the issue of Time, which called the quartet’s work “some of the strangest and loveliest music ever played since jazz was born”.

“It was the worst and the best moment possible, all mixed up, because I didn’t want to have my story come first,” Brubeck told a US television interviewer.

“He was so much more important than I was – he deserved to be first.”

The choice of a relatively unknown white musician over a black star like Ellington sparked the ire of some colleagues and critics, many of whom felt his offbeat music did not swing the way jazz should.

But it also made him a household name and paved the way for the success of Time Out, which used rhythms unusual to jazz that Brubeck had heard in his travels around the globe.

Fuelled by pioneering drummer Joe Morello, the album hit the top of both the jazz and popular music charts. The group sold millions of records before disbanding in 1967.

AFP

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