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Author Archives: gerard oosterman

Growing your own vegetables and sign the Petition

19 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

Balsamic, Chinese, Home and Garden, White Ladies Funerals

kg-01-600x400punnets

Growing your own Vegetables;

Never has it been more tempting than now to grow your own vegetables, breed and kill your own chickens, and be self-sufficient in food. The world is getting so edgy; you just never know where the next crisis might come from. Daily bombings around the world with constitutions being re-written and our politicians are seething with discontent. On the television we get a steady diet of cooking shows interspersed with more bombings and massacres. It seems the only way forward now is  growing your own food with taking out a good solid funeral plan with the White Ladies Funeral’s phone number firmly stuck on the fridge door with the help of a magnet, or… be sunk knee deep in gloom forever..

We bravely prepare ourselves, get a solid pair of gardening gloves and take ourselves to the large Home and Garden place which always seems to be situated somewhere on the edge of the suburb where we live or on some major highway to another city. We have set our mind on starting off with punnets of crispy cos lettuce seedlings, the same as we have seen the previous night with a Chinese lady crunching the fully grown cos in salad bowl and then adding a dressing made from some balsamic vinegar, palm sugar and some shredded coconut. The addition of slices of red Spanish onion adds both colour and taste.

This Oriental lady seems to enjoy cooking enormously and finds it terribly funny because she just never stops laughing, does she? Even the breaking of an egg in a bowl starts her off in spasm of unstoppable mirth and merriment. If that’s what cooking makes us into, let me go for it. I am jealous of her bountiful cheerfulness. Ling Poh has won my heart forever.

As I enter the punnets division at Homes and Garden I am smiling widely and even laugh when I pay at the cash register. I have bought twenty four seedlings of cos and twelve of beetroot together with three bags of soil and one bag of ‘well rotted’ cow manure. I load the lot up in one of their very low slung trolleys ready to go to the car park. It is a difficult trolley that seems to want to turn around when I push it. I noticed one keen female gardener with 5 bags of soil dragging the trolley behind her giving the obstinate trolley no option to change direction or go south. I follow her determinately while not forgetting to keep my laughing up.

Of course, there are also gardening shows on TV. One features a terribly enthusiastic gardener who, if he stood still long enough, could easily be taken for a gnome. I forgot his name but he is rather short and has a kind of Karl Marx beard, and you half expect him to eat a handful of soil, that’s how he enthuses about anything that grows. Of course, the patron of all gardening shows is the man with the Yorkshire accent who till recently when he retired, was featured weekly on the ABC gardening.

I drove home and filled my special anti-rot arsenic infused pine timber gardening box with soil and planted the cos and beetroot. I am getting hungry already and I will be so agonizingly healthy. But, I am still smiling!

Please sign and stop the  slaughter by guns;

http://www.change.org/petitions/international-court-of-justice-at-the-hague-bring-the-us-pro-gun-senators-to-justice

Food,Sex,and smoked Eels

18 Tuesday Dec 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 24 Comments

Food,Sex, and smoked Eels.

December 17, 2012

sexyfoodsm

Food, Sex, and smoked Eels.

It is curious how we are drawn to food especially on how it looks. Was it always like that? I can’t remember my mum having cook books or reading about food. She simply cooked nourishing food within her means. Within her means was very difficult during and even after the war. Food, costs generally speaking, money, except for those that grow their own. However, as their income grew, so did the intake of more expensive food and from hardly ever eating meat, it came to eating it perhaps twice a week and the boring brown beans turned into witlof, leeks and carrots..

Has anyone ever succeeded in growing their own not being a farmer? We tried on our farm to grow our own but were beaten back by the near impossibility of it. The exceptions were rocket and silver-beet and the first year lots of strawberries. We had rain then.

In Holland during school years most students would at some stage be given a small bit of communal ground on which, for just one season, we would grow edibles, either green or even pinky red coloured. I remember riding my bicycle home with a bag of potatoes strapped on the back. My mother was ecstatic. Apart from spuds, I grew lettuces, carrots and some kind of green stuff looking like grass. It was spicy and on sandwiches delicious, especially with some sugar sprinkled on it. One could keep snipping it and it would be harvestable again the next week. It was a kind of cress but was not grown in water. Perhaps it was rocket except it looked more like grass.

When arriving here, growing anything was challenging. I can still see Dad, all red faced and perspiring hacking away at the unforgiving hard soil in suburban Sydney’s Revesby with Dutch coarse oaths renting the still air. It was so hard and I’ll never forget his efforts in trying to grow something to supplement my mum’s cooking. I doubt the growing of food was ever a success. If it wasn’t for the hard soil, it would be drought, insects or birds eating all. He bought all sorts of poisons and sprays, even scaffolding for the fruit trees carefully inspecting all the apples for worms etc. At one stage he prepared scaffolding decked out with planks around one fruit tree which he would climb into and peer inside the thousands of flowers to look for fruit flies. He was that determined. He spent ours perched on top of that scaffolding. Poor dad, he did really try so hard.

We have achieved quite a good herb garden here in Bowral but have done this through containing all the herbaceous plants within the borders of two timber boxed.  We pre-filled the boxes with good friable top soil and copious cow manure. This is so much easier to control and water. Milo, our Jack Russell, of course keeps the birds away.

Now-a-days, food and cooking are very different and elevated to an art form. Brown beans have disappeared.  Whole libraries are devoted to cookery books. As some wit stated, anyone who eats three times a day understands perfectly well why cookery books sell three times more than sex books.

For some eating has replaced sex as their favorite pastime. You can’t pick a fight with your boeuf tartar nor is it likely that this dish would take your home and kids in a bitter and protracted divorce fight.

I can’t remember ever seeing people in the past eating while moving about. Now the fact of putting food in a mouth seems to encourage the body into a forward locomotion onto the streets and even crossing traffic lights, but as yet have not seen any doing it in reverse.  I have even seen driving and eating. One hand is stuffing the mouth which is masticating wildly from side to side, the other on the wheel with similar sideway movements. Women don’t generally eat while driving but do stroke their hair or eyelashes.

However, it wasn’t totally unknown for people to also eat while having sex. That apparently has been the norm for centuries. I have seen with my own eyes in Pompeii a fresco with a reclining gladiator on a sword holiday wearing a Roman toga fornicating languidly and casually while calmly eating bunches of grapes at the same time.

A good friend of mine told me his wife loved taking small bunches of smoked eels to bed which she would devour in between their entanglements. The husband preferred smoking a cigar. The only place where cooked food is more dangerous than sex is in Britain whose greatest contribution to its cuisine has been the chip.  I was told that if you believe mussels increase your libido with an enduring and endlessly lasting tumescence, to always make sure you don’t put them on too soon.

With women, always a bit tricky at the best of times, it is often romance that is more important than food. Nothing is more romantic than having a pair of new shoes as well as breakfast in bed. With men shopping is often a bit like sex, after five minutes of it they get tired and walk out of the shop.

In the meantime we all plod along the best we can. The choice is as always, make the best of this round world that spins around trying to shake you off. We cling and hold on, grasping at anything that we might find nourishing, gives us a bit of security. And that happens to includes food. Keep hanging on in there folks!

Read all about it.

Tags: Bowral, Holland, Mussels, revesby, Roman, Sexual Intercourse, Sydney, Tumescense, Vegetables Posted in Gerard Oosterman | Edit |

Please sign the petition.

16 Sunday Dec 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 17 Comments

Gerard Oosterman‏@GOosterman

Here is the link;

http://www.change.org/en-AU/petitions/international-court-of-justice-at-the-hague-bring-the-us-pro-gun-senators-to-justice

International Court of Justice at The Hague: bring the US pro-gun senators to justice http://www.change.org/petitions/international-court-of-justice-at-the-hague-bring-the-us-pro-gun-senators-to-justice?share_id=nfQLAsnmTL&utm_campaign=twitter_link&utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=share_petition&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=twitter … via @change

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

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

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 »

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.

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

Zwarte Piet

30 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Holland, Sinterklaas, Zwarte Piet

Zwarte Piet

November 27, 2012

Zwarte Piet.

I suppose everybody at some stage in their lives would have experienced a Zwarte Piet. I certainly did. The Zwarte Piet in Holland is what the bogey-man or the Halloween figure is elsewhere. It is a mythical all powerful figure that has an aura of badness as well as some benevolence about ‘it’. I say it, because it has lately been turned in having the possibility of being a female as well. See, how far reaching the female has got? Nothing is now impossible for the fair sex to achieve.

All of those have some kind of pagan history dating back hundreds of years and might even relate to the festivals of the dead or harvests. In earlier times they must have had good parties celebrating the dearly departed as well as having a good harvest. As the pages and centuries marched on relentlessly we must have become a lot more gloomy and pessimistic. There would not be too many celebrating a nice good death by stomping around a bon fire and giving good send-offs. More likely ‘ uncle Harry was a skinflint, good riddance’, as he slowly in his well bolted down casket ( just in case of a bad smell) slides into the warm and welcoming crematorium’s oven.

The idea of the Zwarte Piet in Holland is to make small children behave just a few weeks before the 5th of December when his boss SinterKlaas arrives from Spain on his horse and gallops over rooftops from house to house to drop jute bags of presents down the chimney for those that have passed the test of good behavior. I always passed the test, hence was always supplied with lots of grey hand knitted socks and sometimes a ball that would bounce.

The whole idea of those kind of figures has probably been invented as a pedagogical tool for large families to have some kind of hold over small children. A kind of psychological cane: if you don’t do as you are told, ‘no socks or ball.’

The evenings of the 5th of Dec were for me the most exciting events of my life and not much has exceeded those nail biting evenings ever since. Let me explain!

Zwarte Piet was the helper of Sinterklaas; a bishop from Spain, who, legend has it, would sometimes eat naughty children as well as give presents to good children. Do you get where I am going now? Of course, I wasn’t a fool even though I had some sympathy for those so very hungry, they would eat anything even naughty children! The war was still warm with ruins still smoldering.

Boy, did I do what my mother asked me for. Wash up the spoons while standing on a box, tidy my room and not forget to wipe my bum. The evening of the 5th was most spine tingling. Of course, December is already gloomy and Europe at its darkest. Storms were usually howling and we prayed Sinterklaas would be able to manoevre his horse over windswept rooftops. Soon, the dreaded knock on our door announced Zwarte Piet had arrived. A black gloved hand would slowly appear around the front door. He would bang louder and louder and we kids would hide under mum’s skirt. A somewhat daunting experience, but we were scared witless! Even though my behavior had been faultless the preceding weeks, you just never knew! Would I end up being eaten?

Zwarte Piet would then throw handfuls of ‘pepernoten’ (a kind of hard dog-kibble like clove and cinnamon laced type of biscuits around the room. This was the moment I had been good for all those long weeks. On hand and knees, I crawled, totally possessed, around the room fighting off my competing brothers tooth and nail for the most handfuls.

When all this subsided and we were weary from being good and battled out we would finally take a peek around the door. Lo and behold a large jute type of coal bag with the presents was left behind. Oddly enough, my dad would then suddenly appear. It was a couple of years later when this dream was shattered when told that Zwarte Piet was really my dad.

So it always goes, dreams are beholden by the child till stolen by adults

Bradstow Brad….Bradman. Bowral: a study by Ronald A.Wild

27 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Ronald.A.Wild.Bowral, Southern Highlands

Bradstow:

a study of status, class and power in a small Australian town.

We would never have known that moving into Bowral we had gone into the lion’s den of a pathologically conservative society. Not that it matters much at this stage. We say ‘good-morning’ or give a nod of acknowledgement to the friendly people walking their dog around the Bradman oval. Most of them have a little plastic bag tied onto the dog-lead in which to scoop up any substance excreted by their massive Labrador or ‘tiger’ terriers. We don’t carry any bag because Milo is discreet and sensitive enough to wait till he sees a spot well hidden from any possible feet treading into it.  Even then he tries gallantly to bury it with a furious and lengthy back scratching of leaves and soil. “Good boy, Milo, well done.”

By accident I found out that back in 1974 there was an ABC 4 corners program done by a Peter Reid on the Bowral society and it’s dearly held conservative values. It was based on a book by R.G Wild called “Bradstow.”  The program was well received according to a friend who keeps a keen eye out on those sort of part social and part academic community studies.

It turns out later that the professor, R.G Wild at La Trobe University who had based his PH.D on anthropology studies done at Sydney University, was found to have plagiarized large tracts of a book. In 1985 a book of his, An Introduction to Sociological Perspectives, was published by Allen and Unwin. It was not long before several academics noticed
that extensive passages from the book were taken, without sufficient
acknowledgement, directly from other sources. Publicity about this led Allen and
Unwin to withdraw the book, and eventually La Trobe set up an inquiry into the
apparent plagiarism. In 1986, Wild resigned and hence the incomplete inquiry was
disbanded. Wild soon obtained a high-paying job at Hedland College of Technical
and Further Education,   It became the ‘scandal of the century’.  He went on to publish a few more books on Social Stratification in Australian society and the perceived class-less society.

Here is an abstract of this study.

Abstract

This study revisits the Southern Highlands community of Bowral (NSW), the subject of Ronald Wild’s political examination in the late 1960s.

The paper commences with an assessment of changes in the local political economy, comparing contemporary socio-economic indicators and electoral data with Wild’s findings. Little change is revealed in the patterns of social stratification or conservative political dominance between the two periods.

In Wild’s study elite theories were employed to explain the endurance of conservative parties in Bowral’s inequitable social environment. The local working classes were accordingly cast as a passive, apathetic and ignorant lot, politically beholden to the local gentry and their class allies. This paper argues that these theories do not adequately explain why a social class seemingly votes against its interests.

The lived experiences of Bowral’s working classes received minimal attention in Wild’s study. For the working classes, particularly the more isolated and resource starved constituents of rural Australia, the politics of survival closely shadows the world of electoral politics. A deeper understanding of the hidden politics of everyday life is crucial to our understanding of Australia’s capitalist democracy.

This paper highlights the bias in Australian political studies which continues to render much of contemporary working class politics invisible. It argues for studies in the political economy of everyday life to inform class analyses of communities, as an important adjunct to studies of institutionalised power

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