Saturday, March 23, 2013

The Power Of Music

     The first documented piece of music was the Seikilos Epitaph.  It is a complete musical composition - including lyrics - written in the ancient Greek musical style and found engraved upon a tombstone near Aidin, Turkey.  The find has been dated anywhere from 200 BC to around AD 100, with the first century following the birth of Christ to be the most likely guess.  The last two words on the tombstone are "Seikilos Euter{pei}" meaning "(from) Seikilos to (presumably his wife) Euterpe", thus creating the world's first long distance dedication and thus beating Casey Kasem to the punch by roughly 2,000 years.
     Translated into English, the words on the tombstone read:
   
     While you live, shine,
     have no grief at all;
     life exists only for a short while,
     and time demands its toll.

     Seikilos found his voice in the safe harbor of music, and through it gave an eternal voice to his love for his wife.  In it, she assuredly found comfort.
     Throughout the many years since Seikilos walked the earth, human beings have created music for their own enjoyment, as a means of expression, and as a way to pass and create mental and personal milestones through their lives.
     Today, music is everywhere.  It is found playing as a calming influence in baby nurseries; serving the same purpose for patients in dentist chairs; pumping up crowds at sporting events; providing peace and comfort at funerals.  Schools teach it, radio stations perpetuate it, motor vehicles have it, homes are filled with it.  It is portable and permanent, recorded in all forms and styles by all the world's people, and is now even found - only by perspective and lucky extraterrestrials, NASA hopes - aboard our little ambassador the Voyager spacecraft launched in 1977 including the form of recordings of Mozart, Beethoven, and, of all things, Chuck Berry.  The record sent on the Voyager also had the words "To the makers of music - all worlds, all times." handwritten on it. 
     Music also has the ability to stop war.  In one famous incident on Christmas Eve 1914 along Europe's World War I Western Front, exhausted German and British troops stopped the slogging and the slaughter for a brief truce in which gifts and family photos were shared, handshakes given, and each side understood the others common humanity.  Both sides sang the words to "Stille nacht, heilige nacht," which the British troops knew as "Silent Night."  Soon, both sides retreated to their frozen bunkers and the carnage was to begin anew.  But for a while, peace reigned with the help of a musical creation.
     Not all of us are given the gift of musical talent.  My father's family is rife with that gift from top to bottom, including my grandfather's involvement with the Franklin, Nebraska town Clown Band, the many musical talents of my aunts and uncles (and father), and the creation of, and participation in, by my uncle Don in a musical group quartet with the best name ever thought of for such a numerically-specific venture:  The Uncalled Four.  Unfortunately, the gene of the musical gift stopped with me.
     I tried trombone for two years but never "got" it or liked it much.  Oh, I can sing a bit and can carry a note fairly well but that's hardly the same.  The best I can do as far as understanding music is that in my mind I can "hear" chord progression and change, whatever that's worth.  I think it's this instinctive gift that my now-passed ancestors are still trying to shove down my throat despite my inadequacies.  All I can say is God Bless them for trying.
     The musical klutzes among us can still love it for what it is worth, though.  We can still marvel at the power of Bach, the fire of a Jerry Lee Lewis, the passion of a Roberta Flack, or the simple pop schmaltz of a Christopher Cross or an Olivia Newton-John in spite of our inability to ever even remotely personally create something as good.  We can still feel the weight of the darkness when driving down a nighttime highway with Phil Collins' "In The Air Tonight" blaring at full volume, or seeing the sky brighten to the notes of Cat Stevens' "Morning Has Broken" or The Beatles' "Here Comes The Sun."  Through our senses and our collective DNA we are able to love what we cannot personally create, to appreciate what we cannot concoct.  One day we will carry our love of music to the stars with us, and it will sooth the strain of our long journey, the loneliness for what we have left behind, and will help make smooth the rough edges of a new creation and a new civilization that will most likely need all the civility it can get.       
   
     

     
   






     





Saturday, March 16, 2013

This Ain't Your Momma's Haymarket

     The Haymarket District of Lincoln, Nebraska - so named for a "Market Square" area being designated between 9th and 10th, "O" and "P" Streets for exchange of livestock and produce in the original plan of the city - has undergone many changes since the inception in 1867 of the now capitol city of the state.
     For those of my time frame growing up in Lincoln, The Haymarket was where places like The Tubbery, Andy Pasto's, and Starship/Stooges were located, bums hung out (I distinctly remember one peering out at me from a containment area under the front of one of the old warehouses there), the monolithic main Post Office lorded over all, and where Amtrak made their daily stop.  It was also a place of a self mortar-lobbed empty gallon bottle of wine out of a moving car about a block east of the aforementioned Post Office back in about 1979 or so.  No, we were not drinking and driving but the truth is what the truth is.
     Approximately six months from now, the Haymarket District will undergo another major change with the opening of the Pinnacle Bank Arena.  A gargantuan structure to the eye, "The Pin" will be home of the University of Nebraska men's and women's basketball teams.  (Note:  Lincoln's hockey team plays in a structure called "The Ice Box" and I started an unofficial campaign to have the new Pinnacle Bank Arena called "The Deposit Box" as sort of a companion structure but the idea never took flight, genius never being properly rewarded.)  It will also host concerts of major acts, most likely the state high school basketball championships, and other civic events.
     I recently visited the site for the first time since construction began, and the change in the area is striking and profound.  The arena appears to be so closely built to the old Main Post Office that one could jump from the roof of one structure to the other, although it would be a James Bond-like feat to try it.  It seems to be all circular shape, windows, and ramps and it has a big-time feel to it.
     Off to the south of the site, construction also looms large and in progress.  Parking garages, hotel construction, and development of something called Canopy Street are underway.  Canopy Street is a commercial and residential development that is being billed as a place to play and permanently stay to experience the new Haymarket.  One, two, three, and four bedroom lofts will be available in the area and, although I'm guessing the prices will not be cheap, I'm thinking that at least initially they will be snatched up by the eager.  On paper, it all looks very impressive.  For nearly a half a billion dollars of public and private investment, it had better be.
     The "Pin" will fill Lincoln's need for a concert venue, the Devaney Center having outlived its usefulness in that regard and the aging Pershing Center for the same reasons times 100.  Devaney's roof structure couldn't hold the weight of the setups of today's modern concerts, and Pershing for the longest time has only held concerts of used-to-bes and up and comers.  The new arena will bid for and host major acts.  One problem:  In researching this blog post, I found on one arena promotional site an informal poll asking respondents to vote on who should be the first act to play there.  Among the choices were Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga, Kings of Leon, The Zac Brown Band, and Kenny Chesney.  Chesney is the only one of the bunch that I'd even remotely want to see, and that's not by much.  But to all of the blogosphere, this I swear:  If Lady Gaga christens that thing?  I'm personally grabbing the torches and pitchforks and leading the charge to barricade the doors.
     But this is a sports-driven venture.  Lincoln is all about the University of Nebraska, and if you don't believe that ask those who tried to save the old state fairgrounds from the clutches of the uppity-ups at the "U" who wanted that land for the new Innovation Campus.  They never stood a chance, although the preservers of history did manage to save at least in some form the trapezoidal Industrial Arts building from the wrecking ball.  It will remain at least in part, to be connected up with the old 4-H Building in some sort of "modern" (read:  improved) structure, the future use of which is to be determined.
     The arena when finished will form the third point of a sort of sports triangle, the other two anchors being Haymarket Park (the baseball venue used by the professional Lincoln Saltdogs and the U of N's team) and the venerable and historic Memorial Stadium where football reigns in the fall.  It is quite the sight driving into Lincoln from the north on I-180 at night (see a virtual look at the drive along with views from the finished Haymarket here), with Memorial Stadium to the left and Haymarket Park and the nearly-done arena to the west and south, respectively.  But I'm prejudiced:  A lifelong Nebraskan, university alum, and sports fan in general would feel no other way.
     I'm really looking forward to seeing the finished "Pin" for the first time.  I'm guessing that I'll feel the same way about it as I felt the first time I walked into Haymarket Park for the Husker's NCAA baseball tournament game that Shane Komine started, completed, and won.  My thought was this:  This is too good a facility for Lincoln to have.  We don't deserve something this good.  Of course, we did.   But that's how I felt.
     I've no doubt that the new arena will make me feel the same way.  Winston Churchill said this once in regards to rebuilding the House of Commons after it had been destroyed in The Blitz:   "We shape our buildings, and afterwards our buildings shape us."  Talented workers have formed and continue to form the new venue on the edge of west Lincoln, but in the end the building will form and shape us and our lives through memories and experiences.
     I can't wait.
    

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Who's Snoping Snopes?

     I fully admit that when I succumb to assorted bits of total naivete that I've been known to forward internet emails and photos without thinking about whether I should or not, and, as a result, I'm sure I've propagated along the way certain ideas.  To wit:  Three daily slices of burnt toast as a cure to male pattern baldness?  Automatic forward.  Joe Biden's teeth secretly harbor alien life?  Ditto.  GOP budget stubbornness to blame for Florida sinkhole?  Click.
     I mean, I did this all the time.  Something looked interesting and it was my interest - nay, my duty - to let others know.  An awful habit.  But then one day the clouds parted and I saw the light.
     Enter snopes.com.
     Oh, I had heard of snopes but had never visited that particular site so I didn't know what it was "for."  It always sounded "funny" to me, reminding me so much of the Scopes Monkey Trial which involved the Tennessee public school's prohibited teaching of evolution and the prosecutorial skills of Lincoln, Nebraska's own William Jennings Bryan.  But being the responsible person that I hope I am, I checked it out.
     It turns out that snopes.com is a website dedicated to either stopping from spreading or otherwise confirming popular urban myths.  Started in 1995 by Barbara and David Mikkelson, it now records at least 300,000 visits a day, and has apparently garnered enough respect to have become the go-to place when people wonder about stuff including usage by media outlets such has CNN and Fox News.  Snopes covers a lot of potential misinformation bases, including pop culture, media, sports, history, language, and many other categories.  In one famous debunking, snopes dispelled the rumor that the nursery rhyme "Sing A Song Of Sixpence" was actually a coded tune used by pirates to help recruit members.  Important work.  Probably.
     But eventually if I walk down a certain path the inevitable cynic in me rears its head, and in this case I think:
     Who's Snoping Snopes?
     In one delicious orgy of misguided optimism, a Wikipedia post on snopes states, " In an attempt to demonstrate the perils of over-reliance on the internet as authority, the Mikkelsons assembled..."  So they promote their authoritative internet site as a definitive place to go to protect against reliance on all things internet.  Is anyone hearing this?  Seeing the irony?  Who died and made snopes the point and click god?  Is it because there was a vacuum that needed to be filled and snopes - to their credit in that regard, I admit - filled it?  Just because they say something is so, we're to believe it without checking their checking?  I just don't do and never will do the blind loyalty thing.  I trust two things completely and totally:  God and my family.  Snopes is neither.
     Snopes has received  more complaints of liberal than conservative bias but insists - again, IN SNOPES WE TRUST - that they use the same methods in researching all potential myths.  FactCheck, in another example of the fox guarding the hen house, found that according to their research snopes was by and large on the up and up in re political bias.   They further state that Barbara was a Canadian citizen unable to vote in American elections and David was once a registered Republican, going out of their way to take both of the Mikkelsons off the hook and with "once" being the operative word.  Again, with age comes cynicism.  I've got both.
     In an article in the February 1, 2013, edition of National Geographic, a story appeared concerning a red-footed tortoise who had somehow survived thirty years trapped in a wooden box that had been stored away in a shed.  When I heard of that story, my heart warmed.  The animal lover in me was doing numerous low-fives with the little reptile for making it through.  Then I thought:  This sounds too good to be true.  I bet it's fake.  I bet snopes has already gotten their self-righteous claws in this one and....
     But I don't care if it's fake.  Not this time.  I don't care if I'm believing in something false.  It's a great story, this little poor soul put away and forgotten with only its shell, the darkness and quiet for company and only termites to eat and condensation to lick for water.  For thirty years.  30.  It's a great story.  And snopes is not going to ruin this one for me.
     Although I bet it probably would love to try.