Saturday, December 3, 2011

Albert Imperato: Founding Fathers: Washington and Ives

In a strange twist of timing, I found myself reading Ron Chernow's superb new biography of George Washington at the same time that I just happened to be reading Jan Swafford's Charles Ives: A Life with Music, published in 1996. Time and again, I found myself comparing these two great American pioneers; one the father of our country, the other an American original who became one of the country's first composers to achieve international renown. One struggled during America's inception to define what the country's political life would be like; the other struggled, as that same country mounted the world stage to define what American music would sound like and what it would mean. At a time when neither political party is offering any kind of overarching version for what American life should aspire to, reading these two books infused me with civic pride and a none-too-small dose of hope that the country indebted to both men might still have a bright future.

As personality types, both men convey so many of those attributes we think of as American: they were highly self-motivated, fiercely determined, by turns practical and idealistic, and guided by a sense of profound personal destiny. And yet in so many ways, they were markedly different. With a keen feeling for how others perceived him, George Washington (1732-1799) - the epitome of the Virginia gentleman -- exerted total command over his impulses and emotions. Throughout his life, as he selflessly served his fledgling country, he diplomatically hid his intense ambition so that he would never appear to be self-serving. Charles Ives (1874-1954), on the other hand, was irascible and opinionated -- the embodiment of the eccentric Connecticut Yankee -- and those qualities found their way into music that remains quirky and hugely individual to this day. Ives railed -- sometimes quite unattractively -- against the "sissies" and "old ladies" who had "emasculated" concert music with their insistence on music being pretty and accessible. He sought to reinvigorate it with more daring rhythms and harmonies, outright dissonance and various experimental techniques. For Ives, the out-of-tune chorister in a local church was doing more for the service of real music than the most refined salon recitalist; in a distinct kinship with the spirit of Beethoven, Ives believed music to be a mystical voice of a democratic people.

As with men of every stripe, their relationship to each of their own fathers is illuminating. Washington's father Augustine died when George was just eleven, an event that cast a long shadow over the son's life. His half-brother Lawrence was among a few other male adults who provided a role model for George, but he also died relatively young, which put George -- after he inherited a family farm -- in an early leadership role in the family. That role included a cool and sometimes outwardly hostile relationship with his long-aggrieved mother. With these losses in mind, Washington considered it a very real possibility that he would also die young, a prospect he feared might cut short his own date with destiny.

Ives counted his father, George, as the greatest influence in his life. "If I have done anything good in music, it was, first, because of my father," he explained, at a time that his own music was finally beginning to gain traction with the public. That father, a bandleader for the Union Army, had filled his son with a love of experimentation; most famously, he had his son experience the impact of hearing several bands, including his own, play different music simultaneously on opposite sides of the town square. He also helped Charles understand the crucial idea that music was an essential component in the life of community. George's death when Charles was just 20 was a tremendous blow to the young Ives, but he paid tribute to his father by dedicating his own life to music, first as a church organist, then as a composer. Remarkably, Ives composed much of that music after hours: his day job was that of an extremely successful and influential insurance industry executive.

Keeping his "day job" cut both ways for Ives: financial freedom meant that he could pursue his art without bowing to commercial pressure, but the stress of his dual career no doubt compounded his health problems (heart troubles and diabetes were factors that led Ives to stop composing for the last two decades of his life).

Marriage was good to both Washington and Ives. Washington's marriage to the wealthy widow Martha Dandridge Custisplaced him at the front rank of the Virginia aristocracy, and provided a partner in life who was willing to make great sacrifices to help her husband bear the burden of his military and political responsibilities. Charles called his wife, Harmony Twitchell -- the daughter of Reverend Joseph Twitchell and a family friend of Mark Twain -- the second biggest musical influence in his life. He was always grateful to her for never asking him to make artistic compromises of any kind. She was also his indefatigable helpmate, caring him when his nerves were frayed and his often-fragile health faltered. Neither couple had children of their own, but George and Martha's home teemed with the children of friends and family, and Charles and Harmony, who hosted children at their farmhouse through the Fresh Air Fund, eventually adopted a young girl.

Washington was lionized in his own time, and continues to be mythologized in ours; he is universally recognized for his singular and invaluable contribution as commander in chief of the victorious continental army and the first president of the new United States. The legacy of Charles Ives is harder to assess and continues to evolve. In some circles, Ives is the de facto father of American classical music, the first to take the inheritance of the great European masters and give it a distinctly American character (it should also be added here that through his generous financial assistance, Ives was also a great advocate for championing new music by many other important American composers). For others, though, Ives remains something of an outlier; a composer who blazed a new path but never quite reached his destination. Perhaps these different views of Ives are not mutually exclusive.

Like the great Austrian composer Gustav Mahler, with whom he shared a philosophical bent (for Ives the Transcendentalists were an important inspiration), Ives drew from all sources around him -- nature, hymns, the music of marching bands, popular and traditional songs -- and reconfigured them into teeming, multi-layered soundscapes. And like Mahler, Ives believed music plumbed spiritual territory that no other language could approach. Both were unafraid to mix the profound with the banal, the beautiful with the ugly, the silly with the utterly serious.

But Mahler has emerged into full-blown acceptance, his symphonies a mainstay of orchestral programs worldwide. By comparison, Ives's music has gone in and out of fashion, and remains more of a curiosity than a "meat and potatoes" staple. Leonard Bernstein's championship of the music of both Mahler and Ives was enormously important, and much the same can be said of Bernstein's prot?g?, Michael Tilson Thomas. That some of today's prominent younger artists -- violinist Hilary Hahn and pianist Jeremy Denk (a client of my company) among them -- are championing Ives's music is a most hopeful sign (here I must give a shout-out to another client, Alan Gilbert, whose conducting of Ives's Fourth Symphony -- an indisputable and profoundly stirring masterpiece -- with the New York Philharmonic, and later with the Boston Symphony, was a true revelation for me).

With America suffering dreadfully from the destructive political partisanship that George Washington prophetically warned against, anyone who truly cares about the country would be wise to read Chernow's new book. In that same spirit, I encourage patriotic Americans to explore the music of Charles Ives. We need to hear it, for in no other music does the sometimes maddening, often cacophonous plurality of the American experience resound with such an optimistic, though admittedly unruly, voice.

2011-11-27-HilaryHahnIves.jpg
Hilary Hahn's new Ives recording debuted at number on the Billboard classical chart

A few recommended recordings:

Bernstein conducts Ives Symphony No. 2 and Other Works (Deutsche Grammophon): One of the great recordings of some of Ives's most colorful orchestral music, this album features vivid performances by the New York Philharmonic.

Hilary Hahn and Valentina Lisitsa: Four Sonatas for Violin and Piano (Deutsche Grammophon): Could Charles Ives ever have imagined that a major classical music label would have ever made this recently released recording, and that it would quickly become a number one bestseller? These are winning performances of intimate music that is by turns daring and nostalgic, startling and transcendent.

Jeremy Denk Plays Ives (Think Denk Media): This recording, which includes one of Ives's most famous works, the knotty, thrilling "Concord Sonata," made several critics' "best of the year" lists. As Denk himself puts it, "Ives wants to recreate the raw experience of music-making, something unfiltered, and beyond all your piano lessons... While driving me crazy, he reminds me why I play the piano at all."

David Zinman conducts Ives (Decca): This collection of orchestral music features strong performances by the Baltimore Symphony of two of Ives's best works: the evocative "Three Places in New England," and the much under-appreciated "Holidays" symphony. Start by listening to the first movement of the latter, which is -- you guessed it -- "Washington's Birthday."

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Follow Albert Imperato on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ajimperato

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/albert-imperato/founding-fathers-books_b_1115148.html

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Iran calls for calm in crisis with Britain (Reuters)

TEHRAN (Reuters) ? Iran called on the West to avoid a deepening diplomatic crisis following the storming of the British embassy in Tehran, saying it was an issue between Tehran and London alone, Iranian media reported on Saturday.

Britain closed its embassy after Tuesday's incursion by hardline youths and expelled all Iranian diplomats from London. The fallout for Tehran spread when several other countries recalled their envoys, including France, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands.

France was also bringing some of its diplomats and their families home from Tehran to ensure their safety, a French foreign ministry spokesman said on Saturday. The move was temporary.

"The British government is trying to extend to other European countries the problem between the two of us," Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast was reported as saying by the semi-official Fars news agency.

"But of course we have told European countries not to subject their ties with us to the kind of problems that existed between Iran and Britain."

Western nations on Thursday significantly tightened sanctions against Iran, with the European Union expanding an Iranian blacklist and the U.S. Senate passing a measure that could severely disrupt Iran's oil income.

Iranian diplomats expelled from London arrived home on Saturday to supporters bearing flowers and chanting "Death to England."

"Spy embassy closed for good," read one of the many placards carried by the crowd of some 100 men and women, at Tehran's Mehrabad Airport, most of whom appeared to be members of the hardline Basij militia.

With swift condemnation from around the world, the embassy storming risks further isolating Iran, which is already under several rounds of sanctions.

The incident followed accusations from Washington of an Iranian plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador and a report from the U.N. nuclear watchdog suggesting Iran was pursuing nuclear weapons.

The United States and Israel have not ruled out military strikes if diplomacy fails to resolve the nuclear dispute. Some Israeli leaders have again started to contemplate the idea of military action to prevent Tehran from making bombs.

POLITICAL RIFT

Mixed signals from Tehran over the attack have drawn attention to the deepening political rift within the Iranian leadership, a split created after Iran's disputed 2009 presidential vote.

Iran's foreign ministry immediately apologized for the storming of the embassy, but some hardline rivals of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad praised it, attributing it to a spontaneous outburst by hardline students in reaction to Britain's "historically hostile Iran policy."

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the last say on state matters, and Ahmadinejad have remained silent, a sign of the unease within the clerical establishment over the crisis.

But in remarks reported on Saturday, Ahmadinejad said Iran would not yield to pressures.

"We will stick to our revolution's principles and values with all our power even if the entire world rise up against us," he told a group of clerics, his official website President.ir reported.

Hardline cleric Ahmad Khatami, one of four Tehran Friday prayer leaders appointed by Khamenei, condemned the embassy storming.

"I say this explicitly, that I am opposed to attacks on and occupations of foreign embassies in the Islamic Republic," the students news agency ISNA on Saturday quoted Khatami as saying.

"The attack by the students will lead to a feeling of insecurity among foreign diplomats in Iran," he said.

The protesters stormed two British diplomatic compounds, smashing windows, setting fire to a car and burning the British flag in protest against new sanctions imposed by London.

Analysts say the closure of the embassies, by cutting off the channel of communication, will complicate finding a diplomatic solution to the nuclear dispute.

"The end of talks with major powers means confrontation and military strikes against Iran. This scenario scares the Iranian regime," said one analyst, who asked not to be named.

Analysts say Iranian authorities are concerned about a military strike against their nuclear facilities as well as a revival of anti-government street protests that followed the 2009 vote, which the opposition says was rigged to secure Ahmadinejad's re-election.

"Sanctions are hurting the people and might force them to take to streets to vent their anger over the economy," said analyst Hamid Farahvashi.

"Some Iranian hawks favor a military strike that will reinforce their strength ... But wiser rulers want to preserve the system through an easing of the tension."

(Additional reporting by Sanam Shantyaei, Hashem Kalantari and Robin Pomeroy; Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Rosalind Russell and Alessandra Rizzo)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111203/wl_nm/us_iran_britain

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Subway bombers in Belarus sentenced to death (AP)

MINSK, Belarus ? A court in Belarus sentenced two men to death after convicting them of carrying out a deadly bombing on the capital's subway system that killed 15 people and wounded hundreds of others.

When the bombing happened at Minsk's busiest subway stop on April 11, Belarus was entering an economic crisis and critics of the ex-Soviet country's repressive government suggested that authorities may have resorted to terrorism in order to distract the country from the troubles. President Alexander Lukashenko denied the speculation.

Investigators said the sentenced men, Dmitry Konovalov and Vladislav Kovalyov, were driven by "hatred for humankind," not political motives. The two men also have been accused of three other nonfatal bombings in 2005 and 2008.

Konovalov and Kovalyov heard their sentencing Wednesday in silence and appeared morose.

The Supreme Court found that Konovalov, from the provincial city of Vitebsk, had constructed the bomb and had stayed with Kovalyov in his Minsk apartment just before the blast. Investigators said Kovalyov was aware of the blast plans.

But Konovalov's lawyer said the evidence presented in court was trivial and inconclusive. The evidence included a videotape of the subway station purportedly showing his client close to the blast site was of uselessly poor quality and he said experts found no traces of explosive materials on Konovalov after his arrest.

"There was no motive, not one piece of direct evidence shown," he said.

One of those injured in the blast also expressed misgivings.

"I came to the first session strongly convinced that those who did it were sitting in the dock, but now I don't have this conviction," Andrei Tyshkevich said.

Belarus is Europe's only country that still puts people to death, and rights activists claim around 400 people have been executed here since the 1991 Soviet collapse. The authoritarian country carries out executions with a bullet to the back of the head; the time and place is a state secret, and relatives of those executed are never told where the bodies are buried.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111130/ap_on_re_eu/eu_belarus_subway_bombing

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Striking UK state workers challenge coalition (Reuters)

BIRMINGHAM (Reuters) ? Hundreds of thousands of teachers, nurses and border guards protesting over pension reform staged Britain's first mass strike for more than 30 years Wednesday in a confrontation with the government over its austerity measures.

Prime Minister David Cameron played down the impact of the strike, calling it "something of a damp squib," saying 40 percent of schools were open and the main London airports were working smoothly.

Unions hit back, saying up to two million public sector workers walked out over reforms that unions say will force them to work longer before they can retire and pay more for pensions that will be worth less.

Union anger has been fuelled by new curbs on public sector pay and hundreds of thousands of additional job cuts outlined Tuesday when the Conservative-led coalition government cut economic growth forecasts and said its tough austerity program would last until 2017.

The power of Britain's trade unions was curbed by Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government in the 1980s, but the public sector remains one of their strongholds.

Unions are threatening further strikes next year if the dispute is not resolved but analysts say a repeat of the 1979 "Winter of Discontent" that helped Thatcher sweep to power is not on the cards.

"It's very different to the 1970s and 80s. Many of the services that were run by the public sector have been privatized," said Tony Travers, a public finance expert at London School of Economics.

"There is not much evidence that rank and file union members want to go on long-term strikes," he added. "The unions have the power to make a fuss and wound but not kill."

BRINK OF RECESSION

Protests, held in towns and cities across Britain, mirror strikes in other European countries where governments are trying to juggle budget deficits with the needs of an aging population.

"Why are the government picking on us in the public sector?" asked Kevin Smith, 54, picketing in pale winter sunshine outside parliament in London, where he works as a security officer.

"We had no rise the last two years, before that we were getting lower than inflation rises. So how long is it going to last?"

Inflation stands at five percent, far outstripping pay rises for public and private sector workers in a squeeze on living standards that is depressing consumer spending.

Retail centers in London and Manchester enjoyed a boost as parents looking after school-age children did some Christmas shopping.

Fears of long delays at London's main Heathrow airport proved unfounded after the government flew home embassy staff to help out and recruited volunteers from other departments to carry out passport checks.

However, underground rail services were not running in Scotland and there were no trains or buses in Northern Ireland.

The government, trying to turn around a debt-laden economy teetering on the brink of recession, says reform is needed as people are living longer and public service pensions are unaffordable.

A coalition of 30 trade unions are taking part in the strike, billed as the biggest walkout since 1979.

Speaking at a rally in the central English city of Birmingham, the leader of Britain's main union umbrella group told Reuters more strikes could follow.

"We will have to see, we want to resolve these negotiations by the end of the year, the government's self-imposed deadline," said TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber.

"I hope it will be possible to resolve it but if not there is then the prospect of further action including days of this sort," he added.

Sympathy was in short supply from some workers in the private sector. "Get back to work and get a maths teacher to give you a lesson. There is no money," said Benedict Crabbe, 38, an investment manager from central England in London on business.

(Additional reporting by Michael Holden and Keith Weir; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111130/wl_nm/us_britain_strikes

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Friday, December 2, 2011

To end the euro crisis, will Europe sing Germany's song?

Merkel seeks fiscal prudence and other German-like economic practices in euro countries in return for more bailouts or Eurobonds. Is Berlin now Europe's moral leader?

In the film ?My Fair Lady,? a befuddled Professor Higgins begins a song with: ?Why can?t a woman be more like a man?? That line could well be altered for today?s euro crisis, with the Germans singing:

Skip to next paragraph

Why can?t the rest of Europe be more like us?

The euro crisis is now 18 months old and threatening the world economy. All eyes are on Germany?s leader, Angela Merkel, to see how much she demands of profligate euro nations like Italy to, well, act more like Germany ? before they are further rescued by the taxpayers of the continent?s biggest economy.

Ms. Merkel sees a moral lesson in insisting that euro nations practice prudent spending, harmonious labor-business ties, and a kind of disciplined borrowing that avoids inflation. Germans talk of spreading their ?stability culture,? which includes living within one?s means while also maintaining a welfare state.

Many of her critics just want more German money or Berlin?s approval of Eurobonds in order to quickly end the crisis. Merkel, however, first seeks a commitment to rectifying qualities, expressed in altered treaties and reform of institutions.

Or as she put it last year: ?This is about the primacy of politics. This is about the limits of the markets.?

Poland?s foreign minister, Radoslaw Sikorski, put a spotlight on Germany?s role in a speech Tuesday before a Berlin audience. ?You have become Europe?s indispensable nation,? he told them.

He cited German philosopher Immanuel Kant?s advice that honesty and responsibility are imperative in the lending and repaying of money. Those attributes form a moral order that, Mr. Sikorski said, should be the cornerstone of the 27-member European Union and its 332 million people.

EU leaders gather Dec. 8-9 and may accept some of Merkel?s reforms. One could be a closer union that forces fiscal rectitude on each government. Countries may be asked to give up more sovereignty to a more centralized European entity. The Polish foreign minister talks of a ?United States of Europe? with a directly elected president.

Some critics of Merkel bring up Germany?s Nazi past (hoping to get more guilt money) or cite how much Germany has benefited from the common currency in expanding its exports. Both complaints miss the main point: A German rescue without reform is no rescue at all. The same mistakes could be easily repeated.

Germany would need to give up more say over its economy if the EU adopts Merkel?s ideas of a more tightly knitted union. That?s a big price for Germans to pay in return for other countries being ?more like? Germany.

Germans are not at ease in reshaping Europe so fundamentally. They have seen their postwar role as more like Switzerland?s. But as Sikorski said, ?I fear German power less than I am beginning to fear German inactivity.?

If the Germans, who must now act as reluctant leaders, can keep their heads when all about them are losing theirs, then they just might have a following.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/LIVFEUTjFuw/To-end-the-euro-crisis-will-Europe-sing-Germany-s-song

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New Social Discovery App Ntro Launches, Backed By $1.7 Million In Funding

ntro-mainThe L.A.-based startup nProgress is launching a new social discovery app ntro this morning, backed by over $1.7 million in funding from?Jarl Mohn, Gordon Crawford, Kevin Wall, Activation Media Partners, Baroda Ventures, SV Angel, Jeff Pulver and Richard Crowell. The app, available now for iPhone and Android, is meant to connect you with others around who you may know through mutual friends or with those who share a common interest. But unlike the others in this space (and there are plenty), ntro is staging its rollout to its target markets. It launches today in L.A. and the San Francisco Bay area, with additional cities planned for the future.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/TQfS1SdC8Ag/

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Harvard-designed 'soft robot' shows you how low it can go (video)

It's the stuff of slow-moving robopocalyptic nightmares: a 'soft robot' designed by a team of Harvard scientists that draws inspiration from invertebrates like worms and starfish. The wired 'bot is made from a flexible elastomer material that allows it to squeeze into spaces that are inaccessible for more traditional robots. Inside are chambers that inflate and deflate, allowing the thing to undulate forward. Definitely check out the robot in action after the break.

Continue reading Harvard-designed 'soft robot' shows you how low it can go (video)

Harvard-designed 'soft robot' shows you how low it can go (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 00:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/fmrl7Yznu2U/

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