La Boheme from Different Perspectives

I saw the opening night of this season’s La Boheme at the Metropolitan Opera, and while the New York Times gave it a wonderful review, I do take exception to one thing. While the sets and production were wonderful (there was even an ovation for the set itself (without people or music) at the beginning of Act III; a more amazing set is rare at the Met), the animals, lead singers, score, and libretto were all strong, as was the orchestra.

la boheme

That is the problem. The orchestra (or perhaps the conductor, Frédéric Chaslin) was too strong and twangy at times, drowning out the singers themselves.

La Boheme is known for its wonderful music and singing, yet that does not mean it was always easy to listen to as the orchestra did not work together and then in conjunction with the singers. I noticed this, as did some of the people around me. I wonder why the Times reviewer missed it? Perhaps a lesson here is that the power of the reviewer comes from a specific worldview (or at least section of seating) that may not represent the perspective of everybody.

An important lesson for those of us involved in education and research.

Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2008-12-16

  • Watched La Boheme at the Metropolitan Opera tonight. I love this opera. #
  • Hectic morning. Two of the key people for a meeting were out sick, so I spent a lot of time coordinating teleconfererences and such. #
  • @darylcook Thank you for the link. #
  • @QueerDuck81 Missed the reference, Vincenzio. Which sandwich? Perhaps you read my mind, as I am off to Subway for a Veggie Delite now! #

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Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2008-12-15

  • Ate too much Indian food for dinner. Need some tea now. #
  • Not getting much done tonight. #
  • @BlancheMaynard Love the French! #
  • Late night tonight. I ironed for hours and am now spending time on iTunes instead of paperwork. #
  • I have an all day event at Pace University. I will be an adjunct there in their DNP program. #
  • I am in an all-day faculty workshop on multicultural competency, and we were asked to draw our social networks. #
  • I find that most of my social network is online. I do not know the ages or social class or religious affiliation of mos of the people I know #
  • I drew a laptop. Most of my network is online. Interesting what this may demonstrate about me. #
  • Great day today at Pace University. I met my co-instructor and had a nice faculty meeting after the cultural competency session. #
  • @BlancheMaynard Merci, madame! #
  • @nycrican2 It is the Doctor of Nursing Practice degree at Pace University http://www.pace.edu/lienhard/DNPworksheet.pdf #
  • @nycrican2 I will be co-teaching the Teaching and Learning in
    Advanced Practice Nursing class in the summer of 2009. #
  • @edwebb Agree with you completely. I know that when I speak with colleagues (such as you) on Twitter, I do not think age, class, race, etc. #
  • @darylcook Sounds like a horrible proposition. I have not heard of it; do you have a link to get some info about it? #

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Music Lost in Time

Do you ever have the experience of being touched by a piece of music, and somehow it feels as if it were around forever, though the title or artist never really clicks? That is one of the things I so love about iTunes; OasisI can get lost following its Genius from song to song, and once in a while I nod incredulously when I stumble across one of those gems. Right, That’s IT!

I just bought Wonderwall by Oasis. It came out on their album (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? in 1995.

Yes, 1995.

It does feel like it has been around and around, but I never knew the title, nor artist, nor even the album or time period. All I knew is that I liked the song. I always liked the song. Happy while borderline melancholic, I was brought through time when I finally found and bought the song last night. In a way, I feel I captured part of my past that has eluded me for some time.

The significance? I did not have much money when I was younger, and certainly little to buy any of the music I listened to. How could I spend all that money on an album when I only know this one song? The music made an impression, and only now do I find myself buying a song or so here and there. Most of it, like this Oasis piece, something out of my past. Not too distant, mind you, as the music still moves me. in a way, it is as part of my present as it is of my past.

Sure, it began having its effect some time in the cobwebs of my memory, yet it still feels fresh. Think Orinoco Flow, or A Christmas Carol, or “Hasta la vista, baby”, or The Wizard of Oz—all in time, though somehow transcending it as well. Every bit as present as historically entering our consciousness in the historical past.

I wonder how often this same thing happens with music, or movies, or books, or political personalities, or myths, or tales of this or that for other people? I recall music, and perhaps other people may recall Meryl Streep in some movie, while others may suddenly slap their heads at a comment about a Faulkner plot twist or seemingly accidental color in a Bruce Nauman installation. Perhaps my students will do that with the Research Process and Methodology class or Principles and Practices of Online Course Creation and Instructional Design class, both of which just wrapped up at NYU. If it takes me 13 years to finally learn the name of a song and an artist and then to buy it, possess it, listen / enjoy / consider / reminisce / consume it late into the night, then I wonder if others may have similar experiences? As a life-time educator, I rarely see the benefits or effects of my teaching, though I have to consider that somebody must do something with all that work and time and effort and energy.

At least, I hope this is the case.

I know it brings me joy that a song I hummed for over a decade I now can appreciate on a new level, that it will be nice if others have this as well. It will be even better if the content or artifact causes more of a transformative experience to enlarge a worldview or effect positive (though oftentimes painful) growth.

Life is truly short-lived if this reflective cycle does not repeat . . .

Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2008-12-14

  • I want to make a blog post to WordPress from my BlackBerry, and Postie does not work well for me. Anybody know any other apps for this? #
  • I just got the new Enya album, And Winter Came. Sublime and hypnotic, especially after the fourth listening. #
  • @rkmoss Not available online? Heresy! #
  • Watching the birds eat at the new feeder I installed yesterday in the Catskills. Wish I can stay longer, but work projects await me in NYC. #

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