Saturday, December 24, 2022

Redeeming love

Here we are at the cusp of Christmas. People always be like “I’m dreaming of a white Christmas”, and a good chunk of the continental US is under a gazillion feet of snow with high winds, making holiday travel even more chaotic than usual.

I myself never dream of a white Christmas and I say people should be careful what they ask for. This year more than ever they should be wishing for stable power, reliable and affordable sources of heat, potable running water and that Russian forces retreat the hell back to Moscow and have a few words with Vladimir Putin.

Anyway, back to the ultimate day of Advent. “Once in Royal David’s City” has always been one of my favorite carols because of the haunting intro by a solo (usually boy) soprano and the build-up to the crashing finish. It typically is the opening carol in Christmas Eve services of Nine Lessons and Carols, and I associate listening to it (broadcast from King’s College, Cambridge) as I drove around, delivering gifts and tying up loose ends for the holiday prep.

I’m giving you a performance by another Cambridge college, Trinity, because they allow women in their choir, which seems more fitting to the 21st Century somehow.

May all who need the joy of Christmas find it this year. Not Putin, tho.

 

 

 

Friday, December 23, 2022

This shall be the sign

Only two more sleeps until Christmas and I have to say I’ve been looking forward to today’s post since my visit to Avignon last month.

I’ve already referenced Medieval paintings I saw at a museum there in my post for Annunciation Sunday. Specifically I was taken by 14th Century Sienese painter Bartolo di Fredi’s portrait of Mary as she took in the news that God was going to impregnate her.

But there was another of his works that kept drawing me back again and again: “Nativity and Adoration of the Shepherds”.

I love this painting because of all the animals. I mean, you have your angels…fine. And the Holy Spirit descending.


But the animals, man—starting with the ox and ass behind Mary and Jesus.

And the “sheep”…or they might be goats. And I think that may be a chicken at the right of the kneeling shepherds. Not sure, but possibly.

But what completely fascinates me are the dogs. They have collars! This one in the foreground:

And this one back with the flock of whatever they are:

(Well, looking at this again, the dog with the flock may be the same dog in the foreground. Di Fredi may be painting a narrative, with the angels appearing to the shepherds in the background and then them arriving at the stable. Dunno.)

Did dogs have collars in First Century Judea? I’m guessing they did in 14th Century Siena but—like the luxurious clothing for Mary—seems a little anachronistic for working dogs at the birth of Christ.

One of the first things we knew about the Russian invasion of Ukraine was how much Ukrainians love their animals. People fleeing the invaders left behind so much, but they took their pets with them, even walking for miles carrying them. We also saw countless photos of Ukrainian soldiers with their cat (and dog) mascots; I loved how the tabbies matched the military camouflage, although I hated the circumstances. Even so, hundreds—probably thousands—of beloved pets have been caught up in the devastation the Russians have wreaked. Neighbors who couldn’t or wouldn’t evacuate have done their best to look after the animals. As one soldier said about the connection between dog/cat and human, “Even in the midst of war, it’s possible to experience fleeting moments of grace.”

Today’s Advent piece is about the shepherds at Bethlehem. “While Shepherds Watched their Flocks by Night” is sung as part of the service of Lessons and Carols at King’s College, Cambridge.

May all creatures—upright or on four paws—experience more than fleeting moments of grace. 

 

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Bountiful, bountiful

It may surprise you to learn that today’s Advent carol originated in Ukraine. It’s known around the world as “Carol of the Bells”, but it was written in 1914, based on the Ukrainian folk chant “Shedryk”, about a swallow that sings the first song of Spring. (Way back when, the New Year began in Spring, and “Shedryk” is kinda focused on the New Year.)

I imagine you could hear a lot of versions of this all over Ukraine, despite the Russian invasion; Ukrainians aren’t the type of folks to let bullies (no matter how many missiles they use) interfere with what’s important to them. So here’s Chornobrivtsi singing it at a Christmas concert in Lviv, 12 years ago.

May the New Year bring the peace and solace that 2022 has failed to deliver.

 

 


Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Hard as iron

We’re at the Winter Solstice, that point in the calendar where those in the Northern Hemisphere experience the longest night. For millennia, humans have found ways—physical and spiritual—to defend against the darkness; one of them is to celebrate the turning of the cycle. After tonight, night retreats day by day until balance is achieved at the equinox, and then the tide turns again at the Summer Solstice.

It’s no coincidence that religious traditions lay on the candles at this time of the year or that much of the imagery revolves around the warmth and light of loved ones gathered in circumstances of good will. Even if too much of that is marketing hype these days, it’s still a good thing to consider allowing some lightness into our lives.

Though difficult, I imagine that the Ukrainian people are doing exactly this at every opportunity they have, though those opportunities be fleeting. And I have so much respect for them.

Today’s Advent piece is perfect for Solstice—Gustav Holst’s setting of the poem by Christina Rosetti, “In the Bleak Midwinter”. IMO Rosetti captures the essence of winter: "Earth stood hard as iron, water like a stone." But then she walks us back, just like the sun does, starting tomorrow.

Here's the Quire Cleveland performing it.

May everyone find light and warmth even in the coldest and darkest places.

 

 

 

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Hark!

For those in the Northern Hemisphere, Advent comes in winter, which—for much of the geography—means cold temperatures, grey landscapes and snow. Many people like that fine, but I’m pretty sure that subset of humanity has easy access to warm shelter, unbroken grocery supply chains and reliable potable water. Millions in areas like Ukraine and Syria are not so fortunate, so the season is mixed for them.

Therefore, today’s Advent piece comes from the Caribbean, via Carnegie Hall, because we could use a little island warmth and color. Here are Kathleen Battle and Frederica von Stade singing “Mary’s Boy Child”, with the help of Wynton Marsalis and the American Boy Choir.

May warmth find its way to all in need of it.

 

 

Monday, December 19, 2022

Gratitude Monday: Those who sit in darkness

This is the last Gratitude Monday before Christmas. And I may have mentioned that I—like millions of others—am sometimes not as into the joy of this season. There is frankly too much shit going on, on both a macro and micro level for me to quite feel…I dunno, festive.

At times like these, I am grateful for the power of music—all kinds of it—to pull me away from the quotidian and wrap myself in beauty. Music has the same power that my morning skyscapes do to fill me with joy, comfort and gratitude.






(This is why I use my morning photos for my computer desktops. When I’m feeling like rage quitting, I close out all the open apps and look at the screen.)

As we round the corner onto Christmas, I think about Ukrainians scrabbling in the ruins of their homes and cities, without heat, light or power thanks to the ego-driven aggressive war waged by Russia; what I’m facing is a puff of wind compared to the hurricane they’ve endured since February.

So I’m sharing one of my all-time favorite Christmas hymns, translated by the Victorian polymath Catherine Winkworth from the German. Its opening verse is imprinted on my soul:

“Comfort, comfort ye, my people
“Speak ye peace, thus saith our God
“Comfort those who sit in darkness
“Mourning under sorrow’s load.
“Speak ye to Jerusalem
“Of the peace that waits for them
“Tell her that her sins I cover
“And her warfare now is over.”

The Cathedral Choir of Saint John the Divine is singing it in a performance from two years ago, when the world definitely needed comfort.

May all who carry sorrow's load find comfort in the beauty of the skies and music.


Sunday, December 18, 2022

Heaven and earth contained

We’re at Advent IV, Annunciation Sunday. This is when Christians focus on that time when the Archangel Gabriel appeared to Mary and announced that she’d been chosen to bring the Son of God into the world via virgin birth, thus getting the whole thing rolling.

We only have the (male) Gospel accounts of that event and they pretty much gloss over what must have been quite the awkward conversation. What we’re told is that, upon receiving the announcement (no discussion allowed), Mary replies, basically, “Well, okay. I am the handmaiden of the Lord. Let’s do this.”

I was reminded of this when touring le musée du Petit Palais in Avignon, which houses a collection of Medieval art. Mary figures in a lot of the paintings—nativity, virgin and child, Mary surrounded by phalanxes of male saints who did not live during her lifetime, the annunciation…quite the fixation on Mary. Viz:

Sandro Botticelli, “Virgin and Child”:


(You're getting two Botticellis for the price of one.)

Neri di Bicci, “Virgin and Child”: 

(This one completely astounded me because look at her fingers!)

Zanobi Strozzi, “Altarpiece of Saint Jerome”

(I wondered why Jerome, so I looked him up. In addition to translating the Bible into the vulgate, it seems that the Church Father had Ideas on how women should live their lives. Because of course.)

I shouldn’t have to say this, but—without exception (unless covered by “School of” or “Anonymous”)—the painters were male. As I went from painting to painting, I was struck by the fact that a Jewish peasant girl was depicted in unlikely luxurious fabrics and furs, everything is sparkling clean and there are no other women in sight (unless the odd Saint Catherine or Saint Bridget gets mixed in with Jerome, Peter, Benedict and the rest). Mary and her role are idealized as only men who never had to bother with domestic life could idealize.

This is particularly true in pictures of the annunciation, where Mary’s reaction to Gabriel’s surprise is demure, pious or rapturous. Except for this one, by Bartolo di Fredi:


Now, this is a portrait of a teenager from the back of beyond who’s just been told by a guy claiming to be an archangel that God is sending the Holy Spirt to impregnate her to fulfill the prophesies of a messiah and for the good of man.

“Dude—wut?

On the Sunday devoted to the ultimate mother, I’m thinking of the millions of women in Ukraine, Syria, Eritrea, Tibet—around the world, really—who are holding things together for their families, friends and communities without benefit of posses of saints to lift them up. They’ve done this in the face of terror, famine, war, floods, misogyny and mansplaining. They have all had the expression di Fredi depicted on their faces more than once, but they carried on. Just like Mary.

NB: Hanukkah begins tonight. For reasons of numeracy, I got muddled about that this year and posted early. That piece is found here.

Okay, today’s Advent piece is “There Is No Rose of Such Virtue”, which dates from the 15th Century. Mary is often symbolized by a rose, usually a white one, indicating her pure state. And here’s Sting to sing it.

May all who carry the burden of holding things together find respite, comfort and joy.