Wednesday, March 29, 2006
Nothing to read.
First of all, let me apologize for my lack of skill when it comes to punctuation. You must know that I had an alternative education, and never did really learn about mundane things like grammar or sentence structure. Come to think of it, I don't think I learned long division either. However, I still have a watercolour of a weeping Statue of Liberty I created in grade 5 called Statue of Misery (I think it was in response to Free Trade or something), and I will never forget how thrilling it was to sing If I Had a Hammer at the Christmas concert (excuse me, winter conert) accompanied by glockenspiel and marimba. So, I asked my mother for help, as she is a professor of English, but she merely encouraged my "idiosyncrasy" as she is also an experimental poet and grammatical anarchist. I often wonder whether she equates the improper use of the semicolon with the coming of the Revolution, glorious and inevitable.
Today I had tea and scones with my dear friend and co-blogger Michael (his musings can be found at mildastonishment.blogspot.c0m). It is always tea AND scones with Michael. One is inconceivable without the other. My dear departed grandmother Inez thought the same thing, and I loved her for it. She was always scandalized (and rightly so) by the fact that we never had baked goods in the house. She would make do with saltines and strawberry jam, but it was a poor substitute, and we both knew it.
Anyway, back to Michael. I love getting together with Michael because he is every bit as pretentious and elitist as I am and we can indulge our proclivities to the full. Michael recently bought his boyfriend a calfskin evening wallet from Holt Renfrew. Everyone else I know would think this a horrible extravagance, but I thought it was perfectly reasonable. After all, one doesn't want the unsightly bump of a wallet to ruin the line of tuxedo pants when attending the opera. I also admire Michael because he has the gift of wearing the right colours. He has never made a faux-pas in this department. It is a rare gift, and I always tell him so. I am always amazed by his ability to look very put together, yet unstudied. This is the first lesson of style. Today Michael was wearing his brown houndstooth jacket from Harry Rosen (of course) , with a camel scarf, and a pale green sweater with light blue jeans. If Van Gogh's Sunflowers were an outfit, this would be it. Whenever I see clothes like this, I feel equal parts awe and envy, for while I love clothes, I am fickle and impulsive in my purchases. This is why I have 6 shell-pink shirts and lime green shoes that match my lime green jacket. You should note that I know these are not my colours, but I buy them anyway, and love them. To tell you the truth, my closet looks rather like an Easter basket rendered by Jackson Pollock, but I digress.
Michael is a writer, and he is in the process of moving out of his gorgeous, well apointed abode at a smart address in search of a room of his own. Or rather, rooms. As a writer, he reasoned, one's home must be workplace and sanctuary, therefore a bachelor apartment is out of the question as one must have a place to work, as well as a place to recover from it. For this reason, walls dividing spaces are a necessity and not an indulgence. I told him that I had once read that it is in a wall's very nature that it should crumble. He was impressed by my bon mot, and I told him (in between nibbles of warm cardamom-scented scone) that it was a quote from Confucius. I actually think I read it in a novel by John Le Carre. Regardless, I came across the quote in Berlin (where walls were once thought to be a necessity) so this redeems it. In any event, pedigree is less important if something is amusing.
Michael mentioned that he is thinking of starting a bookclub. But not just any bookclub. It would be called the Smart Boy's Bookclub, and we would get together and read Proust and eat brie, and be very smarmy. He asked me if I knew anyone else who would be interested in joinging, and I replied, quite honestly, that I did not. (Flashback to recent blind date: What do you do? I sing opera. Oh, is that like Phantom? Um... I don't feel so well. I think I have to leave). Michael seemed dejected. "Sometimes I think I should go out more often and meet interesting people in Vancouver. But then I wonder if I have already met all of them." I couldn't think of a reply. We drank our tea and stepped out into the grey, slighly misty Vancouver afternoon. The mountains were stunningly beautiful, and I felt for a moment that I was in a Group of Seven painting. And then I thought, who wants to stay inside and read Proust and cultivate a personality when you can look at the mountains and breathe the magnolia-scented air? Perhaps, I reasoned, a rich inner life is the consolation prize of those who cannot live in beautiful surroundings. Perhaps Michael and I are refugees from a place or time that was less beautiful, but more stimulating. Perhaps I am full of shit. But if I am, it is of the best quality.
While we were on the subject of books, I told Michael about a shop I had visited in Paris that sold only first editions. He said that the true lover of books should always seek these out, because they would be cherished. We then lamented the decline in the intrinsic value of books in western society (see post on Chapters, oh wait, there is none). I told him that we started to go to hell in a handbasket with the invention of the printing press. Not only did books become less precious, but the masses started to read.
Of course, we masses are grateful for places like Tanglewood Books, which was having a sale. So we perused. Michael mentioned that as he got older, he was beginning to enjoy reference books. My heart warmed, as I have always loved them. I think it was my way of being contrary. When I was a child, I used to go into my mother's study (remember she is a professor of English and grammatical creative) and ask for something to read. My mother's eyes would light up and she would unfurl the full panopoly of English literature, from Beowolf to Beckett. You like geography, she would say, why don't you read The Waves? You like history, why not Henry V? I was, at this point, about nine. I would exclaim "but mom, there's nothing to READ", and off I would go and devour a biography of Marie Antoinette, or my favourite, manuals on Etiquette. I still find them reaussuring, especially when one is confronted with tricky situations. For example, say you are in court mourning for an archduchess but are compelled to give a quiet supper before the theatre. How do you invite the guests? Simple. Use your informal mourning stationary (that is to say heavy vellum edged in black, sans monogram) and have your footman deliver them, but make sure he wears a plume of white or black in his hat. Colour would be an affront to the departed. I don't need to tell you that I tried to make my own mourning stationary after my grandmother died with india ink and foolscap. I thought it was appropriate to do so in order to invite Kathleen over to play Monopoly.
Even then, I knew that I was different. I tried to hide my liking for royalty and fine things, because even then, I knew it would mark me. However, in my eagerness to conceal, I revealed more than I thought. For example, I remember my mom's friend Anne asked me if I really did like the Royal Family. I replied, in horror, that of course I did not, and that my interest in them extended only to the Green Drawing Room at Windsor Castle as I found the amalgamation of the Baroque and Regency styles curiously effective.
Well, I will continue along this vein anon. I am off to rehearsal. We are preparing for Faust by Gounod. My favourite part is where we all turn our swords over to make the sign of the cross
so that the devil will go away, and sing with one accord C'est une croix qui de l'enfer nous garde (it is a cross which protects us from hell).
May my ancestors forgive me!
Sunday, March 26, 2006
Slavery is Not Entertainment!
My favourite thing to do at Capers is to look at the latest posting on the Customer Suggestions board. This really is a cornucopia of material for the satirist at heart. It is a place where all the naked-bike driving, green voting crazies-who-rolled-to-the-coast can vent frustration about their victuals, and about our world. "No more genetically modified turmeric!" proclaims one.
"I am offended by the price of organic goat butter"reads another. These are funny, and sometimes I laugh, but occasionally, I come across a really good one:
I would like to see more candida compliant dishes such as kamut, spelt pasta salads, Ezekiel wraps and amaranth quesadillas. Also stevia-sweetened treats would be great.
Thanks!
-Paloma
Dear Paloma
I agree wholeheartedly. I will continue to advocate for such cleanse-free and diet-restricted foods options from our regional merchandisers. -Sean
At least if you buy a cookie at Fauchon in Paris (or at the Maple Leaf bakery around the corner) there is the sense that you are doing something purely for your own gastronomic pleasure. When you buy a cookie at Capers, you are not only buying a cookie , you are purchasing a disproportionate amount of rhetoric... sort of a "think globally act locally" at the most microscopic level. It is as though they are trying to save the world, one cookie at a time. The combination of healthy organic ingredients doled out with a combination of Protestant missionary zeal and left-wing tree hugging myopia is what makes Vancouver unique. Needless to say, these cookies leave a bitter taste in the mouth, and not just beacuse they are made with brewers yeast and prune syrup.
Dear Paloma and Sean. Please get your heads out of your assholes and walk 8 blocks down to Hastings and Main. Ask the people standing there if they have heard of amaranth or kamut or stevia. Then give them all the money you were going to spend on cruelty free apricots, and don't ask any questions. Then, write a letter to the UN and ask why 1 billion people don't have running water. Or you can go to Capers in Lagos (or Kasheshewan) and write the following letter:
Dear Government/Large compaines-that-run-the-world:
Why don't we have clean running water? -Paloma
After I went to Capers, I attended a concert at the Vancouver Aquarium in honour of its 50th anniversary. The highlight of the concert was the premiere of a piece called Whales by local composer Leslie Uyeda, which was performed beside the beluga tank and incorporated whale sounds. Of course, as I was walking to the aquarium, I came across a man covered in balloon animals blowing in a loudspeaker. "How would you like to live in a bathtub? Slavery is not entertainment!" he yelled, with a megaphone, in my ear.
And then I started to think about Brigitte Bardot. Don't you think it is absurd that Brigitte Bardot is going ape-shit over seals in Canada while her own country is on the brink of rebellion due to social inequality and racial tension? Don't you think it is a bit bizarre that a man finds the fire in his soul to yell at people with megaphones about sea mammals (which are housed down the street so we can see them, and not think of whales as something distant that we don't need to think about) and not about the chronic lack of social housing?
Perhaps I don't get it. Perhaps buying organic grapes and getting offended by fish that live in tanks is the path to enligthenment and social change. I know that the earth is interconnected, and that we have to think about things like organic food, and animal rights. But, I also think that people often get involved in causes that don't get their hands dirty so they don't have to think about the issues outside their doorstep. Like the man who regularly shoots up drugs outside my apartment while I take out the garbage.
I think I should invite Brigitte Bardot and that protester for lunch. At Capers. We can fritter away the afternoon dining on organic figs and cruelty-free salmon, content in the fact that we are eating with a pure heart.
Thursday, March 23, 2006
"In Terrace, it doesn't matter if you're rich or poor because you always have a million dollar view"
This morning, I baked muffins using a dog-eared recipe from the Terrace Hospital Women's Auxiliary Cookbook. Stirring the batter as the sun came up over Terrace Mountain, I felt at peace, serene in the knowledge that I was creating something nourishing for my friends. Then I looked at the clock. 6:10 AM. Damn Jetlag. So then I made baking powder biscuits, and bacon and eggs. And then I just felt like an indentured servant. But we had a lovely breakfast, and to tell you the truth, if I had to decide between traveling through Europe or baking muffins while looking at the mountains, I don't know which I would choose (well, I could bake muffins in Switzerland, but I think you need a visa for that).
Here is a recipe for muffins that turned out quite nicely. Courtesy of the Terrace Hospital Women's auxiliary Cookbook (with a few "improvements" by yours truly):
1 egg
1/2 cup butter, melted
3/4 cup packed brown sugar
1 TCP vanilla
1 cup milk mixed with 1 tsp vinegar
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup all purpose flour
1 cup bran
1 cup raisins, or blueberries.
Method:
Go on month-long European trip. Get severe jetlag as a result. Travel to remote Canadian town. Wake up at 4:45 with nothing to do. Decide it would be quaint to make muffins, even though you don't know where anything is in kitchen, much less light switch. Step on something warm. Realize it is cat. Oops.
Through perseverance and creativity, assemble ingredients and utensils needed to make muffins. Alternate between glancing out out of window to look at snow-capped mountains and apologizing to bruised cat:
Preheat oven to 375.
Whisk egg until frothy, add sugar, butter and vanilla. Stir to combine. Add soured milk and stir. Combine flour,
salt and baking powder. Add to wet ingredients in 1 addition and stir quickly. DO NOT OVERMIX. Add bran while you can still see white streaks (in the batter... not your mind). Finally, fold in blueberries or raisins. Fill buttered muffin tins 2/3 of the way and bake for 20 minutes. Please don't use those paper muffin cups. I hate them. Remove from oven, cool in pans for 10 minutes, and then continue cooling on rack, if they last that long.
Serve with cheddar cheese. Drink Red Rose tea. This is not the time for fancy caramel roibos or organic fair trade chai. Sit at old melmac table, listen to John Denver, watch sun rise and contemplate. Or not.
Serves 1-4 depending on appetites and how much of the batter you a) spilled on the floor, b) ate in the process.
Wednesday, March 22, 2006
Let's Learn Nisga'a!
TJ: "Mom, I need the car. Darlene and I are going to Gitwinksihlkw"
Mom: "Well, I suppose that's okay. I mean you've been going out for a year. Just make sure you use protection."
Chanelle: "Laxgalt'sap!!!"
Bobby-Joe: "Chanelle, what did I tell you about enacting Alien 3 at the dinner table ."
See what I mean?
In Nisga'a language and culture, places are not named after people (as is common in European culture) , but rather the events that happened there. For example, in Nisga'a, Vetter Mountain is called T'ooyaksim wil at-aayiskwsim awa'am, mi ii sim k'ax nii-wiltkwhl lax ts'eets'ikgum', which means "place where the lava came from many years ago and killed our people". Interesting. So, if you were so inclined you could rename many things. For example, instead of saying
"I am going to the Crapper" (Mr. Crapper is the person who invented the modern flush toilet), you could say "I am going to the room-where-shit-periodically-hits-white-porcelain-bowl." If nothing else, this unconventional approach to the identification of every day things could lead to interesting conversation. Think of how exciting it would be to be at the forefront of language!
Tuesday, March 21, 2006
Northern BC Haiku
"Hey granny, what is in them?"
"-Melted rabbit fat!"
Mnum Mnum!
Journey to Cow Bay
The other day, my friend and I decided to journey to Prince Rupert. The drive from Terrace to Prince Rupert is supposed to be one of the 10 most beautiful in the world, and I don't doubt it. The mountains were covered with snow, and the trees white with frost. We sat in silence and listened to selections from Wagner's ring cycle... truly the only music appropriate for such an epic landscape. Upon reaching "Rupert" as it is known to the locals, I noticed a large bovine shaped sign with the words "This Way to Cow Bay". I was intrigued. You should know that cows are my favourite animal and always have been. In fact, when I was 10, a freind of the family made me a rocking chair emblazoned with cow spots, and complete with a tail made of rope. In fact, I now have 3 garbage bags full of cow memorabilia sitting in a crawlspace in Winnipeg.
So, we headed down the road, and suddenly I noticed that everything was painted with cow spots. The signposts, the garbage cans, even the mailbox. But why? Well, apparently, in 1909 Prince Rupert did not have a dock, so when the local dairy farmer ordered some cows from down south, they had to swim to shore after being unloaded. The name stuck, and the locals had nothing else to do, so they painted everything Holstein.
We went to a place called the Cow Bay Café, ordered Cowpuccinos, and I had a "Cowpie" (actually a coconut chocolate cookie... but it was rather slimy and brown). Best of all, the café is covered with photos of cows that people have sent from around the world. Oh, and the mascot of the café is a holstein named "Mean Millie"!
See, she lives on! Even better, our server assumed that my friend Ellie and I were a couple, so I gave her a meaningful look and said "its our anniversary". Well, we got our coffee for free...they were SO touched. I don't feel bad at all. If people are going to make assumptions, the least I can do is lie to them and get free stuff! Mean Millie indeed.
Sunday, March 19, 2006
"Something about the Mountain Air"
I thought it was funny that my friend lives on Queensway Road... did they rename it in my honour? Ha ha ha. Well, that's not so funny, but upon my arrival, she suggested we go for a walk at Fairy Island Park. Do you see a trend?
Then, she she suggested that we go for lunch, at this Greek restaurant called "The Golden Flame"... Okay... THEN, we passed the bike shop. It was called "OUTspoken". At this point, I was starting to wonder about a gay conspiracy in rural BC, but it gets better. On the way to the Golden Flame, we passed a bar called "Bear Country". I was beside myself with laughter. Here we are in this redneck town in the middle of nowhere, and everything has a queer name! Then we parked, and I look up to see a thrift store called "Closet Queen Consignment". I am not making this up. It was run by this little old lady, and I don't think she had any idea.... or did she? Maybe these places are really just fronts. Maybe I am in the centre of a thriving gay community, and I just don't know it... like the Provincetown of the north or something. I highly doubt it... I was at the Skeena mall, and they were blaring Phantom of the Opera from the loudspeakers... to keep people from loitering. If this really was a gay town, people would be camping out in designer snowsuits. I will get to the bottom of this (ha!) Tomorrow we are going to Prince Rupert... also known as "The City of Rainbows"....This is getting surreal!
Thursday, March 16, 2006
Briefing for a Descent into Hell
Well, it is 3:38 in the morning and I am wide awake, which I suppose would be a good thing if I had to milk cows or undertake spy operations for CSIS or something. I don't know why this happened, the Jet lag. I mean, I did everything right! I stayed up until my bed time, I drank lots of fluids, but to no use. Alas. I have already watched infomercials about cellulite reduction pills (scary), a CD rom bible (double scary), as well as a program called "Its a New Day" (oh my God, where's the scotch) that consisted of Bible readings done by people with really white teeth. The glowing teeth of those who know they are truly saved. Ah, the glories of midnight North American TV. They'll fleece you and then prepare you for the coming of the Lord, all in about 37 minutes.
I am back in Vancouver. I hesitate to use the word home, because I do not feel that this is really my home. I have thought, and still think, that Vancouver is a little provincial outpost that happens to have really nice physical features. Like a beautiful woman with no brain. Like... like Charla. Who, might you ask, is Charla? Well, more about that later. But first I must tell you about my return trip.
I re-entered North America with a profound sense of loss. My final moments in the air where spent with my eyes squeezed shut, listening to the overture to the opera Hansel und Gretel (Wagner for kids) and clutching my plastic cup of cognac, trying to squeeze every last bit of European culture before I landed in Chicago. The music was sublime, the cognac smooth, the dulcet tones of the stewardess entreating us to travel with Lufthansa in perfectly modified "I-love-your-accent...where is it from?" English were soothing.
And then, THUD. America.
At Munich airport, I spent my last precious Euros on a chartreuse-green marzipan petit-four and double espresso, served on a silver tray. I sat in a quiet, subtly lit leather booth, looking at the snow, my mouth exploding with intense flavour. For about the same price in the bowels of Chicago-O'Hare, I bought a roastbeef sandwich the size of a dinner plate (with about as much flavour). They charged me extra for a slice of tomato, and I they asked for a tip, even though it was in a food court. So much for the land of the Free! I sat next to some middle aged pharmaceutical reps who, even though eating lunch with one another, constantly talked on their blackberries about "flooding the Chinese market", which to me sounded like the title of a Beijing opera. Gloom. On CNN, there was some story about an autistic kid who scored 2o points in 6 minutes at a basketball, and how it made George W Bush cry. Let me get this straight, Mr. President... You invaded Iraq, fucked it up so bad that there is now civil war. Citizens of your country die every day because of your idiotic foreign policy (not to mention the medieval state of your social programs), and THAT doesn't make you cry, but you cry about basketball? I mean, it warms the cockles of my heart when an autistic kid does good, but... Well, anything is possible. I mean, Hitler was a vegetarian. Something about the stench of death....I mean Auschwitz was fine, but bratwurst? That's murder.
Then I walked over to Starbucks, there being no double espresso on a silver tray available, and ordered a small coffee. A small coffee at starbucks is about 6 times the size of a large coffee in Europe. It also has 6 times less flavour. As I was drinking this swill, I thought of uses for Starbucks coffee, as it is clearly unfit for human consumption. Perhaps they could use it to antique marble busts.. you know like they did in the restoration of Windsor Castle after the fire. Or, perhaps they could send it to the Ukraine at Easter to dye eggs. I hear coffee enemas are popular too.
Of course, the latest thing that Starbucks that they're trying to push is "artistry". It is as if they are trying to convince us we are drinking a one-of-a-kind cup of gastrnomic patrimoine made with love and respect fot the ingredients (the recipe for which has been passed down through impoverished by cullinarily inspired grandmothers), when we are really drinking genetically modified crap with a shot of marketing and a dollop of globalization. As I paid for my coffee-enhanced-beverage-experience (the "small" coffee which would caffinate half of Innsbruck), I noticed a photo of a barista, earnestly drizzling chocolate on a latte, and there was this blurb about how he was "an artist" and how each latte to him was a work of art, and how he put his "artistry" in every cup. Artistry my ass! Please tell me what is esthetically or nutritionally sound about a "chocolate brownie frappucino" - 24 ounces of brownies, ice cream and espresso blended with ice and put in a cardboard cup emblazoned with a quote by Wynona Judd about her "journey" through life? (Incedentally, it has about 700 calories and 30 grams of fat, approximately the same as half a cup of butter. Oh, did I mention that obesity is a problem in the United States?) Artistry! If he is such an artist, why does Starbucks pay him 5 dollars an hour? Artistry! I have an idea. Why don't we put a skinny-half caf-no whip-grande-in-a-venti-cup latte in the Louvre right beside Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People and then ask bystanders which one they think is art, and which is garbage.
Which brings me to Charla.
As you can well imagne, my blood was boiling. Then I boarded my flight to Seattle and in the seat next to me was a very well turned out blonde woman who had no wrinkles, even when she smiled. She looked harmless enough, and we got to talking to one another, as people sometimes do when not plugged into their blackberries, ipods,cellphones or laptops. (or a combination of the above... or all of the above) . Her name was Charla. Innocently, I asked her what she did for a living. I was not prepared for the answer.
Charla, perky blonde friendly Charla, is a bonafide marketing rep who works at Starbucks HQ in Seattle. The Enemy. So close... I wanted to tell her how much I hated her company and all it stood for, but I held my tongue. I thought I could extract some choice information if I just pretended I was Barbara Frum (may her memory be for a blessing) on the Journal.. You know, poised, inquisitive, humane, great sweater. Here is a segment from our conversation:
"From the Forbidden City to Frobisher Bay, Starbucks is a company to be reckoned with. With its potent brew of coffee drinks and comeraderie, it offers the consumer something that is clearly irresistable. I am sitting here on United Airlines flight 3465 to Seattle with Charla, a marketing representitive with the company. Charla.... as someone on the inside, how do you account for Starbucks' powerful global presense?
"Um, like, well, I think people are REALLY passionate about, like, coffee education? You know?
Like, people go there to connect. We work ALL the time, and we need fuel. Coffee... its like.... like... a legal drug?"
-She was wildy gesticulating with manicured fingers, seemingly incapable of forming complete sentences. I couldn't decide whether it was enthusiasm, or stupidity. I decided on the latter.
"Indeed! I think what I want to know, indeed what I think all Canadians need to know, is if the ratification of Meech Lake accord will really bring an end to the constitutional crisis."
"huh"
Whoops... Okay, maybe a little bit less Barbara.
"Sorry. What I want to know is, what made you want to work for Starbucks?"
"Ohmigod. Well, each floor has, like 4 kitchens, and you can make yourself as many lattes as you want for free! I calculated it out, and it was like I gave myself a 2500 dollar raise!"
This woman spent 2500 a year on flavoured milk. Fuck
"I gained 10 pounds though. I am trying to lose it now. I drink lots of tea."
"It must be difficult being away from home so much. Do you travel for work a lot?"
"Tonnes. But you know, its great... Everywhere I go, there is like, a Starbucks, and it makes me feel at home. "
"Tell, me, what are the most exciting new markets that Starbucks is pursuing?"
"Ohmigod... India! There is so much going on. I mean, like a billion people! And they all drink milk... not like in China. But in China, Starbucks is, like HUGE. SO cool. And those asian babies are SO cute!"
My head was reeling, but there were only 20 minutes left in the flight so, I decided to stick it out, and be brave. I asked one more question. Before I could, Charla continued:
"You know, I think the best thing is that Starbucks is now supplying our troops in Iraq. I just feel great that we can give them something to make their lives a little easier"
You know, I never thought that I would long to be back in Germany, of all places, but at that moment, I really really did.
Postcard
Monday, March 13, 2006
Munich
Then I started to laugh hysterically, and then beer started to come out my nose, and then the Bavarians pointed and laughed at me. Then I danced with Klara. Then the tuba players played 'Proud Mary' and I ordered more beer, and thought, you know, the Germans really are crazy. THEN, the man at the bar started to sing. Except, he had survived throat cancer and had those special voice boxes where you have to press a button on your neck to talk. I think I should write a cantata for 2 tubas, pomeranian, and person-with-artificial-voicebox. You know, if I set the poetry of Margaret Atwood, I could apply for a Canada Council grant.
First we take Manhattan, then we take Berlin
Saturday, March 11, 2006
Berlin... what day is it again?
A few hours earlier, I was in a completely different world (read West Berlin) where the subway stations are decorated with mosaics illustrating different composers in tastefull abstract forms (as opposed to East Berlin where you cannot read any of the signs because there is so much graffiti..) I attended a wonderful performance of Verdi's Un Ballo un Maschera. Anywhere else, the performance would be hailed as a once-in-a-lifetime event. I mean, the tenor even sounded GOOD! But Berliners are spoiled, and it got only a polite response. But let me tell you, it is great to see and hear good opera in a building actually designed for opera, as opposed to the barn-like acoustically vapid places they perform in in North America! Another thing about heavily subsidised theater is that they can hire armies of coatcheck people. There was literally a whole floor of coatcheck... and you don't have to pay. How civilized. Of course, at the Deutsche Oper, they also offer Veuve Cliquot by the glass at intermission. Of course I had some.. but I made the mistake of calling it 'sekt' which is the German word for sparkling wine.
The waiter was taken aback and pointed out in no uncertain terms that I was drinking CHAMPAGNE, and that if I wanted SEKT I could go downstares to the BASEMENT CANTEEN.Well I never. So, who was it that was telling me that Germany was a largely classless society? I also saw a man wearing a leather tuxedo. Only in Berlin...
This afternoon, I was having coffee and marzipan torte at a café in Friedrichstrasse, and observing people, of course. Everyone was sitting in silence, unsmiling, eating cake. The radio was playing these overwrought orchestrations of Bach, and I thought to myself, only in Germany. The Germans are not demonstrative, they do not usually talk with their hands, and they do not show much outward emotion. They do it all through their art, which is part of the reason Berlin has 3 opera companies, and why it has bequeathed some of the greatest achievement in art, literature and music to the world. This is my theory, anyway.
My day started with a jolt. I was on the subway, when a man in a blue tracksuit asked to see my ticket. Apparently, their their transit police are plainclothes, as to not arouse supicion. I thought I was going to be mugged! I didn't know I was supposed to validtate my ticket, and I almost got a fine, but I feigned ignorance.... So, if you are ever in Berlin, buy a 1 week ticket, but don't validtate it until you get caught. This way, you can make a ticket last for much longer, as it is only valid from the time you validate it, not the time you buy it.... well, I wouldn't reccommend it, really. Well, off to Bed.
Thursday, March 09, 2006
Berlin day 3
After this, I decided to go to West Berlin and visit 'KaDeWe', Berlin's answer to Harrods. There is nothing quite like watching pencil thin blonde West Berlin matrons browse through the Chanel display... If you only have one more chance to eat in your life, go to the Food Emporium. I have never seen anything like it my life. The chocolate section alone is about an acre, and contains every kind of chocolate there is... well, only the good stuff. You can appreciate that I spent about 3 hours there. The salami counter (well more like Salami wing) was unbelievable. There were 6 kinds of Serrano ham. You cannot buy Serrano ham in Vancouver. There was also a champagne bar, a huge buffet, a caviar counter, a meat counter (where you could buy tongue and tripe and calf head, but also organic grain fed steak for like 159 EUROS a kilo). Also, a tea wing that I think was hermetically sealed to preserve the aroma!!!! They were cooking lobsters to order for old men and their mistresses when I left... to have a drink with Andre.. the crazy PhD student... Actually, I tried to call him first, but German payphones are the most annoying machines I have ever encountered. They are impossible to navigate, and it took me an hour to figure it out. They thank you for your call before you have finished dialling it! Of course, the instructions are in German or Turkish...
Andre grew up in East Berlin, and apparently KaDeWe was used as an example to show how bad capitalism was 'sure, they have nice things in KaDeWe, but they also have unemployment and inequality and homelessness.' Point taken.
Andre is doing his doctorate on the conditions of Mining Engineers in the Third Reich, and the extent to which their political affiliations affected their ability to get funding, and to what extent the government put pressure on them to join the Nazi party. He has been going through the state archives for about 2 years, and his research is mind boggling. As is the amount of Beer (and Jagermeister,and aquavit, and schnapps) he drinks, and I drink in his presence. I think you have to drink a lot to live here.... Did I already say that?
Party like its 1932.
I took a bus all the way from the very East to the very West, just to see the difference between the areas of the city. The suburbs of East Berlin might as well still be in Soviet times. It was very eery....concrete block buildings and not much else, and the streets had names like 'Michelangelostrasse' which is kind of ridiculous, considering the surroundings. West Berlin, in contrast, is very nice and built on a much more human scale... apparently the architects wanted to distance themselves from the monumentalism of the Nazi period. After this, I went to the Jewish museum, which is designed by Daniel Liebeskind. It was a fascinating place and I spent almost the entire day there. The museum deals with 2000 years of Jewish history in Germany, from Roman times to the Present day, and is a multimedia extravaganza. The architecture is very unique too, but the signs leave a lot to be desired, consequently I missed most of the monuments.... Perhaps the most interesting thing was an interview done with ordinary German people by German TV on the street in the 1950s. The interviewer would ask 'did you know that Jews were being killed' and they would always answer 'of course'... Well, one could infer a great deal from that. All the interviewees I have seen when interviewed by Western media deny ever knowing.
After that, I went on an orgy of ticket buying. Berlin is really the world's best place to see Classical music. In fact, I am going to 3 concerts at the Philharmonie in 2 days... Bach's St Matthew Passion and St John Passion, as well as the Cherubini Requiem (one of my favourite composers, and not often performed)... Tonight, I have the choice of seeing 3 operas. Aida, Macbeth or Xerxes (by Handel)... Berlin has 3 fully functioning opera companies. Amazing. Waning to avoid the hell that would be Karaoke at my youth hostel (It is stupid... people go to hostels and they hang out there, and they meet people from every country of the world, except the country they are visiting)....I decided to check out Berlin's famous nightlife... Berlin has something like 40,000 bars and clubs. First I went to a Gay bar. This is dfferent than a club, where thousands of people jostle in the darkness without speaking to one another. A gay BAR is a much more precious and rare thing... where people can sit and while the hours away and watch the Lesbians next door having a political meeting. It was very nice, and I then decided to go and check out a 'warm up' party for Brokeback Mountain, which is opening in Germany tomorrow, but on the way, I got very lost.
Apparently, this is the best way to meet Berliners, because they always offer to help you. I met a PhD student named André this way, and he had a theory about this: Germans cannot stand when things are out of order. Seeing someone who is lost is almost unbearable to them, and they feel the need to set things straight, because perhaps there is something wrong witht the map and they need to notify the proper authorities. He invited me for a beer, saying 'you are travelling alone in Berlin and not drinking beer? That is not right! So, we went to a bar and drank black beer, which is a Berlin specialty (Germany has over 30 kinds of Beer), and talked about a great many things, few of which I remember. He had a theory about why Germans are so punctual, which I found amusing. He has a Polish girlfriend, who was 10 minutes late once, and he was almost beside himself, because he had 10 unstructured minutes of his day, and of course he got to thinking:
Minute 1 - The state of the German economy
Minute 2 - The future of Germany within the context of a united Europe
Minute 3 - living under communism
Minute 4 - The fall of the Berlin wall
Minute 5 - World War 2
Minute 6 - The Holocaust
Minute 7 - Oh my God, I have a Polish Girlfriend... what will my parents do?
Minute 8 - Turkey joining the EU
Minute 9 - See minute 7
Minute 10 - See minute 7
He said that by the time he arrived, he was beside himself. Maybe he is just high strung, but it was very funny. One of his friends in university is Sudanese and a devout Muslim. I think we are going out for a beer on the weekend.... how crazy is that? Now I am going to the Checkpoint Charlie museum, and then to the Pergamon museum, arguably the best collection of Ancient Greek art in the world. Very cool. Berlin has possibly some of the most beautiful classical architecture in the world. Frederick the Great kind of went on a building rampage, which was a good thing. More soon.
Tuesday, March 07, 2006
Berlin, day 1
One of the weirdest things today was standing on the Hitler bunker. There were 2. Once has been demolished, but one still exists, although it is flooded. You can still see the trap doors leading to it, which are located right in the middle of a housing development, right by a swing set.
I also went to the holocaust memorial, which is 3000 slabs of granite in all different shapes and sizes. They are supposed to represent a delapidated Jewish cemetary, and if you walk through it, you will probably get lost, which is the point.
Berlin and Germany are struggling right now. The city and the country are broke, and there is 17 percent unemployment in the city, and up to 30 percent unemployment in the Eastern part of the country. It was also interesting to know that only 35 percent of Berliners voted for Hitler, and that there were over 40 planned attempts on his life. Also, during the Weimar republic, Germany had the most liberal constitution in the world. Well... I am off to bed. More tomorrow.
Berlin... First Impressions
Monday, March 06, 2006
Au revoir Paris, not adieu.
I started off the day at a store that sells 18th century lithographs.. my favourite kind of art. I bought a few, as my souvenir of Paris, and promptly left them at the ticket counter at the Gare d'Est... this probably had something to do with the fact that I accidentally ordered a half litre of wine at lunch, when I meant to order a glass... (a delicious repast at a place appropriately named 'le depart'... good, honest simple French food: warm goat cheese on toast with a salad, beef braised with carrots, and tarte tatin... hot caramelized apple pie. The place was reccommended to me by the owner of the art store, who doesn't have a cell phone, and thought it was a good thing I didn't either). Fortunately, someone had turned them in and I was able to reclaim my precious cargo. But I was soused..Well, waste not, want not is what I say.
Then, I walked around in the sun, and thought that a good way to say goodbye to Paris was to buy perfume. Incedentally, there is this huge chain of perfume stores called Maisonnaud, and they pop up every block or so, even in the really sketchy parts of town. French people take perfume seriously, and you can smell only the faintest hint, un soupcon, un suggestion, as people walk by clutching their scarves. Very nice. I bought 'Envy' by Gucci... I think it is rather appropriate! I promise to be tasteful, and to tell people that I learned how to wear perfume tastefully while in Paris. As I was leaving, the woman asked how I was liking my time in France, and I said of course I was, and she said,
'but of course! What is not to like in France?' When one is half drunk and buying perfume on impulse, on a sunny afternoon in Paris, there really is no answer to this question.
Sunday, March 05, 2006
Normal day
After this, I came back to my hostel for a nap and to read my new very heavy book about the French Revolution (which I am trying to read as fast as I can as not to carry it with me on my journey). Then, I went to a perfectly hideous rendition of the Mozart Requiem at l'Eglise St Eustache. I thought... wow! Full house, concert in a cathedral, can't go wrong. Well, you know it is a bad sign when members of the choir wave to their family in the audience as they walk in. Cathedral accoustics are very forgiving (lots of reverb) but there is no hiding bad tuning. Alas. #
Today admission to all the museums is free.... so you can imagine the lineups, but I am going to be breave and go to the Pompidou centre. Or, I will just go to a cafe and watch the people go by. Both sound equally appealing.
Friday, March 03, 2006
Hajj
After this, I attended Mass at Notre Dame, and then sat at a jazz bar overlooking the seine, drinking Chardonnay and planning for tomorrow. Until then!